EXAM ACTUAL QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS -
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1. The primary purpose of a roadside guardrail system is to:
A. Stop all vehicles from leaving the roadway
B. Redirect errant vehicles in a controlled manner
C. Prevent roadway flooding
D. Improve pavement friction
Rationale: Guardrails are designed to redirect and contain vehicles, not to
stop them abruptly or serve unrelated roadway functions.
2. Under current U.S. standards, most newly installed guardrail systems must
comply with:
A. AASHTO Green Book only
B. NCHRP Report 350
C. MASH (Manual for Assessing Safety Hardware)
D. OSHA Subpart G
Rationale: MASH supersedes NCHRP 350 for new installations and reflects
updated crash testing criteria.
3. The most commonly used guardrail face element on U.S. highways is:
A. Box beam
B. W-beam
C. Cable barrier
D. Concrete parapet
Rationale: W-beam guardrail remains the standard roadside barrier due to
cost-effectiveness and performance.
,4. Standard post spacing for typical strong-post W-beam guardrail is:
A. 3 ft 1 in
B. 6 ft 3 in
C. 8 ft 0 in
D. 12 ft 6 in
Rationale: 6 ft 3 in spacing is specified in most state standards for strong-
post systems.
5. The primary function of a blockout is to:
A. Increase rail height
B. Reduce wheel snagging on posts
C. Strengthen soil support
D. Anchor the terminal
Rationale: Blockouts space the rail away from posts to reduce vehicle wheel
interaction.
6. Minimum installed height of W-beam guardrail (top of rail) is typically:
A. 24 inches
B. 27 inches
C. 31 inches
D. 36 inches
Rationale: Current standards specify approximately 31 inches to align with
vehicle bumper heights.
7. Guardrail deflection refers to:
A. Vertical settlement of posts
B. Lateral movement during impact
C. Longitudinal expansion
D. Installation misalignment
, Rationale: Deflection is the sideways displacement that occurs when a
vehicle impacts the system.
8. A “length of need” calculation determines:
A. Number of posts required
B. Terminal type selection
C. Minimum guardrail length to shield a hazard
D. Required rail height
Rationale: Length of need ensures the hazard is fully shielded from the
design vehicle path.
9. Which soil condition generally provides the least resistance to driven posts?
A. Dense clay
B. Compacted gravel
C. Saturated sandy soil
D. Frozen soil
Rationale: Saturated sand offers minimal lateral resistance, increasing
deflection.
10.Thrie-beam guardrail is most often used to:
A. Replace all W-beam systems
B. Reduce rail rupture on high-speed facilities
C. Serve as a pedestrian barrier
D. Eliminate the need for blockouts
Rationale: Thrie-beam provides increased strength and reduced vehicle
override.
11.A compliant guardrail end treatment must be:
A. Buried in the backslope
B. Rigidly anchored
C. Crashworthy and energy-absorbing or gating
, D. Made of concrete
Rationale: End treatments must safely manage vehicle impacts per MASH
criteria.
12.A “gating” terminal allows a vehicle to:
A. Be stopped immediately
B. Pass through the terminal at low angles
C. Be redirected parallel to the rail
D. Ride up the rail face
Rationale: Gating terminals permit controlled vehicle passage under
specific conditions.
13.Non-gating terminals are preferred when:
A. Space is unrestricted
B. A hazard exists behind the terminal
C. Traffic volumes are low
D. Soil is weak
Rationale: Non-gating terminals shield hazards immediately beyond the rail
end.
14.Which component primarily absorbs energy in an energy-absorbing
terminal?
A. Rail splice bolt
B. Blockout
C. Impact head assembly
D. Post embedment
Rationale: The impact head deforms or extrudes the rail to dissipate kinetic
energy.
15.Transition sections are required when connecting guardrail to:
A. Cable barrier