Questions and Answers (2026/2027) | Updated
Review | A+ Verified
• Grounding . ANSWER: To provide a low-resistance path for fault current,
ensuring safety and protecting equipment.
• Common standards associated with electrical control . ANSWER: NEMA, IEC,
and NEC standards.
• Ten basic rules of electrical safety . ANSWER: Includes de-energizing circuits,
using PPE, verifying lockout/tagout, testing before touch, and using insulated
tools, among others.
• Lockout/tagout system order . ANSWER: Notify, shut down, isolate energy,
apply LOTO device, release stored energy, and verify zero energy.
• Three-phase power operation . ANSWER: Three AC voltages 120° out of phase
provide continuous power with higher efficiency.
• Function of neutral in electrical power . ANSWER: Serves as a return path for
current in unbalanced systems and maintains voltage stability.
• Using a digital multimeter . ANSWER: Set the function (volts, ohms, etc.),
connect leads properly, and read measurements.
• Grounded and ungrounded systems . ANSWER: Grounded systems have one
conductor connected to ground for safety; ungrounded systems do not, which can
delay fault detection.
, • Overcurrent protection devices . ANSWER: Fuses melt under excess current;
breakers trip; overloads respond to sustained heat or current.
• Three-phase motor operation . ANSWER: Uses rotating magnetic fields from
three-phase power to turn the rotor.
• Interpreting motor's nameplate data . ANSWER: Includes voltage, current, RPM,
phase, service factor, and efficiency.
• Connecting dual-voltage three-phase motor . ANSWER: Use parallel connection
for low voltage (e.g., 230V) and series for high voltage (e.g., 460V).
• Functions of motor control . ANSWER: Starting, stopping, reversing, speed
control, and overload protection.
• Motor control relay circuit interpretation . ANSWER: Understand how control
relays activate coils and change contact states to control the motor.
• Operation of different types of motor starters . ANSWER: Manual, magnetic, and
solid-state starters vary by control type and application.
• Low-voltage protection . ANSWER: Shuts off the motor if voltage drops and
prevents automatic restart when voltage returns.
• Types of motor overload devices . ANSWER: Thermal (bimetallic), magnetic,
and electronic overloads.