Group
G1A - General Class control operator frequency privileges; primary and
secondary allocations
G1A01 (C)
On which of the following bands is a
General Class license holder granted all amateur frequency privileges?
- A. 60, 20, 17, and 12 meters
- B. 160, 80, 40, and 10 meters
- C. 160, 60, 30,
17, 12, and 10 meters
- D. 160, 30, 17, 15, 12, and 10 meters
G1A02 (B)
On which of the following bands is
phone operation prohibited?
- A. 160 meters
- B. 30 meters
- C. 17 meters
- D. 12 meters
G1A03 (B)
On which of the following bands is
image transmission prohibited?
- A. 160 meters
- B. 30 meters
- C. 20 meters
- D. 12 meters
G1A04 (D)
Which of the following amateur bands
is restricted to communication on only specific channels, rather than frequency
ranges?
- A. 11 meters
- B. 12 meters
- C. 30 meters
- D. 60 meters
G1A05 (A)
Which of the following frequencies
is in the General Class portion of the 40 meter band?
- A. 7.250 MHz
- B. 7.500 MHz
- C. 40.200 MHz
- D. 40.500 MHz
G1A06 (D)
Which of the following frequencies
is in the 12 meter band?
- A. 3.940 MHz
- B. 12.940 MHz
- C. 17.940 MHz
- D. 24.940 MHz
G1A07 (C)
Which of the following frequencies
is within the General Class portion of the 75 meter phone band?
- A. 1875 kHz
- B. 3750 kHz
- C. 3900 kHz
- D. 4005 kHz
G1A08 (C)
Which of the following frequencies
is within the General Class portion of the 20 meter phone band?
- A. 14005 kHz
- B. 14105 kHz
- C. 14305 kHz
- D. 14405 kHz
G1A09 (C)
Which of the following frequencies
is within the General Class portion of the 80 meter band?
- A. 1855 kHz
- B. 2560 kHz
- C. 3560 kHz
- D. 3650 kHz
G1A10 (C)
Which of the following frequencies
is within the General Class portion of the 15 meter band?
- A. 14250 kHz
- B. 18155 kHz
- C. 21300 kHz
- D. 24900 kHz
G1A11 (D)
Which of the following frequencies
is available to a control operator holding a General Class license?
- A. 28.020 MHz
- B. 28.350 MHz
- C. 28.550 MHz
- D. All of these
choices are correct
G1A12 (B)
When General Class licensees are not
permitted to use the entire voice portion of a particular band, which portion
of the voice segment is generally available to them?
- A. The lower frequency end
- B. The upper
frequency end
- C. The lower frequency end on frequencies below 7.3 MHz
and the upper end on frequencies above 14.150 MHz
- D. The upper frequency end on frequencies below 7.3 MHz
and the lower end on frequencies above 14.150 MHz
G1A13 (D)
Which, if any, amateur band is
shared with the Citizens Radio Service?
- A. 10 meters
- B. 12 meters
- C. 15 meters
- D. None
G1A14 (C)
Which of the following applies when
the FCC rules designate the Amateur Service as a secondary user on a band?
- A. Amateur stations must record the call sign of the
primary service station before operating on a frequency assigned to that
station
- B. Amateur stations are allowed to use the band only
during emergencies
- C. Amateur
stations are allowed to use the band only if they do not cause harmful
interference to primary users
- D. Amateur stations may only operate during specific
hours of the day, while primary users are permitted 24 hour use of the
band
G1A15 (D)
What is the appropriate action if, when
operating on either the 30 or 60 meter bands, a station in the primary service
interferes with your contact?
- A. Notify the FCC's regional Engineer in Charge of the
interference
- B. Increase your transmitter's power to overcome the
interference
- C. Attempt to contact the station and request that it
stop the interference
- D. Move to a
clear frequency
Group
G1B - Antenna structure limitations; good engineering and good amateur
practice; beacon operation; restricted operation; retransmitting radio signals
G1B01 (C)
What is the maximum height above
ground to which an antenna structure may be erected without requiring
notification to the FAA and registration with the FCC, provided it is not at or
near a public use airport?
- A. 50 feet
- B. 100 feet
- C. 200 feet
- D. 300 feet
G1B02 (D)
With which of the following
conditions must beacon stations comply?
- A. A beacon station may not use automatic control
- B. The frequency must be coordinated with the National
Beacon Organization
- C. The frequency must be posted on the Internet or
published in a national periodical
- D. There must be
no more than one beacon signal in the same band from a single location
G1B03 (A)
Which of the following is a purpose
of a beacon station as identified in the FCC Rules?
- A. Observation
of propagation and reception
- B. Automatic identification of repeaters
- C. Transmission of bulletins of general interest to
Amateur Radio licensees
- D. Identifying net frequencies
G1B04 (A)
Which of the following must be true
before amateur stations may provide communications to broadcasters for
dissemination to the public?
- A. The
communications must directly relate to the immediate safety of human life
or protection of property and there must be no other means of
communication reasonably available before or at the time of the event
- B. The communications must be approved by a local
emergency preparedness official and conducted on officially designated
frequencies
- C. The FCC must have declared a state of emergency
- D. All of these choices are correct
G1B05 (D)
When may
music be transmitted by an amateur station?
- A. At any time, as long as it produces no spurious
emissions
- B. When it is unintentionally transmitted from the
background at the transmitter
- C. When it is transmitted on frequencies above 1215 MHz
- D. When it is an
incidental part of a manned space craft retransmission
G1B06 (B)
When is an amateur station permitted
to transmit secret codes?
- A. During a declared communications emergency
- B. To control a
space station
- C. Only when the information is of a routine, personal
nature
- D. Only with Special Temporary Authorization from the
FCC
G1B07 (B)
What are the restrictions on the use
of abbreviations or procedural signals in the Amateur Service?
- A. Only "Q" codes are permitted
- B. They may be
used if they do not obscure the meaning of a message
- C. They are not permitted
- D. Only "10 codes" are permitted
G1B08 (D)
When choosing a transmitting
frequency, what should you do to comply with good amateur practice?
- A. Review FCC Part 97 Rules regarding permitted
frequencies and emissions
- B. Follow generally accepted band plans agreed to by
the Amateur Radio community.
- C. Before transmitting, listen to avoid interfering
with ongoing communication
- D. All of these
choices are correct
G1B09 (A)
When may an amateur station transmit
communications in which the licensee or control operator has a pecuniary
(monetary) interest?
- A. When other
amateurs are being notified of the sale of apparatus normally used in an
amateur station and such activity is not done on a regular basis
- B. Only when there is no other means of communications
readily available
- C. When other amateurs are being notified of the sale
of any item with a monetary value less than $200 and such activity is not
done on a regular basis
- D. Never
G1B10 (C)
What is the power limit for beacon
stations?
- A. 10 watts PEP output
- B. 20 watts PEP output
- C. 100 watts PEP
output
- D. 200 watts PEP output
G1B11 (C)
How does the FCC require an amateur
station to be operated in all respects not specifically covered by the Part 97
rules?
- A. In conformance with the rules of the IARU
- B. In conformance with Amateur Radio custom
- C. In
conformance with good engineering and good amateur practice
- D. All of these choices are correct
G1B12 (A)
Who or what determines "good
engineering and good amateur practice" as applied to the operation of an
amateur station in all respects not covered by the Part 97 rules?
- A. The FCC
- B. The Control Operator
- C. The IEEE
- D. The ITU
Group
G1C - Transmitter power regulations; data emission standards
G1C01 (A)
What is the maximum transmitting
power an amateur station may use on 10.140 MHz?
- A. 200 watts PEP
output
- B. 1000 watts PEP output
- C. 1500 watts PEP output
- D. 2000 watts PEP output
G1C02 (C)
What is the maximum transmitting
power an amateur station may use on the 12 meter band?
- A. 1500 PEP output, except for 200 watts PEP output in
the Novice portion
- B. 200 watts PEP output
- C. 1500 watts
PEP output
- D. An effective radiated power equivalent to 50 watts
from a half-wave dipole
G1C03 (A)
What is the maximum bandwidth
permitted by FCC rules for Amateur Radio stations when transmitting on USB
frequencies in the 60 meter band?
- A. 2.8 kHz
- B. 5.6 kHz
- C. 1.8 kHz
- D. 3 kHz
G1C04 (A)
Which of the following is a
limitation on transmitter power on the 14 MHz band?
- A. Only the
minimum power necessary to carry out the desired communications should be
used
- B. Power must be limited to 200 watts when transmitting
between 14.100 MHz and 14.150 MHz
- C. Power should be limited as necessary to avoid
interference to another radio service on the frequency
- D. Effective radiated power cannot exceed 3000 watts
G1C05 (C)
Which of the following is a
limitation on transmitter power on the 28 MHz band?
- A. 100 watts PEP output
- B. 1000 watts PEP output
- C. 1500 watts
PEP output
- D. 2000 watts PEP output
G1C06 (D)
Which of the following is a
limitation on transmitter power on the 1.8 MHz band?
- A. 200 watts PEP output
- B. 1000 watts PEP output
- C. 1200 watts PEP output
- D. 1500 watts
PEP output
G1C07 (D)
What is the maximum symbol rate
permitted for RTTY or data emission transmission on the 20 meter band?
- A. 56 kilobaud
- B. 19.6 kilobaud
- C. 1200 baud
- D. 300 baud
G1C08 (D)
What is the maximum symbol rate
permitted for RTTY or data emission transmitted at frequencies below 28 MHz?
- A. 56 kilobaud
- B. 19.6 kilobaud
- C. 1200 baud
- D. 300 baud
G1C09 (A)
What is the maximum symbol rate
permitted for RTTY or data emission transmitted on the 1.25 meter and 70
centimeter bands
- A. 56 kilobaud
- B. 19.6 kilobaud
- C. 1200 baud
- D. 300 baud
G1C10 (C)
What is the maximum symbol rate
permitted for RTTY or data emission transmissions on the 10 meter band?
- A. 56 kilobaud
- B. 19.6 kilobaud
- C. 1200 baud
- D. 300 baud
G1C11 (B)
What is the maximum symbol rate
permitted for RTTY or data emission transmissions on the 2 meter band?
- A. 56 kilobaud
- B. 19.6 kilobaud
- C. 1200 baud
- D. 300 baud
Group
G1D - Volunteer Examiners and Volunteer Examiner Coordinators; temporary
identification
G1D01 (C)
Which of the following is a proper
way to identify when transmitting using phone on General Class frequencies if
you have a CSCE for the required elements but your upgrade from Technician has
not appeared in the FCC database?
- A. Give your call sign followed by the words
"General Class"
- B. No special identification is needed
- C. Give your
call sign followed by "slant AG"
- D. Give your call sign followed the abbreviation
"CSCE"
G1D02 (C)
What license examinations may you
administer when you are an accredited VE holding a General Class operator
license?
- A. General and Technician
- B. General only
- C. Technician
only
- D. Extra, General and Technician
G1D03 (C)
On which of the following band
segments may you operate if you are a Technician Class operator and have a CSCE
for General Class privileges?
- A. Only the Technician band segments until your upgrade
is posted on the FCC database
- B. Only on the Technician band segments until your
license arrives in the mail
- C. On any
General or Technician Class band segment
- D. On any General or Technician Class band segment
except 30 and 60 meters
G1D04 (A)
Which of the following is a
requirement for administering a Technician Class operator examination?
- A. At least
three VEC accredited General Class or higher VEs must be present
- B. At least two VEC accredited General Class or higher
VEs must be present
- C. At least two General Class or higher VEs must be
present, but only one need be VEC accredited
- D. At least three VEs of Technician Class or higher
must be present
G1D05 (D)
Which of the following is sufficient
for you to be an administering VE for a Technician Class operator license
examination?
- A. Notification to the FCC that you want to give an
examination
- B. Receipt of a CSCE for General Class
- C. Possession of a properly obtained telegraphy license
- D. An FCC
General Class or higher license and VEC accreditation
G1D06 (A)
When must you add the special identifier
"AG" after your call sign if you are a Technician Class licensee and
have a CSCE for General Class operator privileges, but the FCC has not yet
posted your upgrade on its Web site?
- A. Whenever you
operate using General Class frequency privileges
- B. Whenever you operate on any amateur frequency
- C. Whenever you operate using Technician frequency
privileges
- D. A special identifier is not required as long as your
General Class license application has been filed with the FCC
G1D07 (C)
Volunteer Examiners are accredited
by what organization?
- A. The Federal Communications Commission
- B. The Universal Licensing System
- C. A Volunteer
Examiner Coordinator
- D. The Wireless Telecommunications Bureau
G1D08 (B)
Which of the following criteria must
be met for a non-U.S. citizen to be an accredited Volunteer Examiner?
- A. The person must be a resident of the U.S. for a
minimum of 5 years
- B. The person
must hold an FCC granted Amateur Radio license of General Class or above
- C. The person's home citizenship must be in the ITU 2
region
- D. None of these choices is correct; non-U.S. citizens
cannot be volunteer examiners
G1D09 (C)
How long is a Certificate of
Successful Completion of Examination (CSCE) valid for exam element credit?
- A. 30 days
- B. 180 days
- C. 365 days
- D. For as long as your current license is valid
G1D10 (B)
What is the minimum age that one
must be to qualify as an accredited Volunteer Examiner?
- A. 12 years
- B. 18 years
- C. 21 years
- D. There is no age limit
Group
G1E - Control categories; repeater regulations; harmful interference; third
party rules; ITU regions
G1E01 (A)
Which of the following would
disqualify a third party from participating in stating a message over an
amateur station?
- A. The third
party's amateur license had ever been revoked
- B. The third party is not a U.S. citizen
- C. The third party is a licensed amateur
- D. The third party is speaking in a language other than
English, French, or Spanish
G1E02 (D)
When may a 10 meter repeater
retransmit the 2 meter signal from a station having a Technician Class control
operator?
- A. Under no circumstances
- B. Only if the station on 10 meters is operating under
a Special Temporary Authorization allowing such retransmission
- C. Only during an FCC declared general state of
communications emergency
- D. Only if the
10 meter repeater control operator holds at least a General Class license
G1E03 (B)
In what ITU region is operation in
the 7.175 to 7.300 MHz band permitted for a control operator holding an
FCC-issued General Class license?
- A. Region 1
- B. Region 2
- C. Region 3
- D. All three regions
G1E04 (D)
Which of the following conditions
require an Amateur Radio station licensee to take specific steps to avoid
harmful interference to other users or facilities?
- A. When operating within one mile of an FCC Monitoring
Station
- B. When using a band where the Amateur Service is
secondary
- C. When a station is transmitting spread spectrum
emissions
- D. All of these
choices are correct
G1E05 (C)
What types of messages for a third
party in another country may be transmitted by an amateur station?
- A. Any message, as long as the amateur operator is not
paid
- B. Only messages for other licensed amateurs
- C. Only messages
relating to Amateur Radio or remarks of a personal character, or messages
relating to emergencies or disaster relief
- D. Any messages, as long as the text of the message is
recorded in the station log
G1E06 (A)
Which of the following applies in
the event of interference between a coordinated repeater and an uncoordinated
repeater?
- A. The licensee
of the non-coordinated repeater has primary responsibility to resolve the
interference
- B. The licensee of the coordinated repeater has primary
responsibility to resolve the interference
- C. Both repeater licensees share equal responsibility
to resolve the interference
- D. The frequency coordinator bears primary
responsibility to resolve the interference
G1E07 (C)
With which foreign countries is
third party traffic prohibited, except for messages directly involving
emergencies or disaster relief communications?
- A. Countries in ITU Region 2
- B. Countries in ITU Region 1
- C. Every foreign
country, unless there is a third party agreement in effect with that
country
- D. Any country which is not a member of the
International Amateur Radio Union (IARU)
G1E08 (B)
Which of the following is a
requirement for a non-licensed person to communicate with a foreign Amateur
Radio station from a station with an FCC granted license at which a licensed
control operator is present?
- A. Information must be exchanged in English
- B. The foreign
amateur station must be in a country with which the United States has a
third party agreement
- C. The control operator must have at least a General
Class license
- D. All of these choices are correct
G1E09 (C)
What language must you use when
identifying your station if you are using a language other than English in
making a contact using phone emission?
- A. The language being used for the contact
- B. Any language if the US has a third party agreement
with that country
- C. English
- D. Any language of a country that is a member of the
ITU
G1E10 (D)
What portion of the 10 meter band is
available for repeater use?
- A. The entire band
- B. The portion between 28.1 MHz and 28.2 MHz
- C. The portion between 28.3 MHz and 28.5 MHz
- D. The portion
above 29.5 MHz
Subelement G2 - Operating Procedures
Group
G2A - Phone operating procedures; USB/LSB utilization conventions; procedural
signals; breaking into a QSO in progress; VOX operation
G2A01 (A)
Which sideband is most commonly used
for voice communications on frequencies of 14 MHz or higher?
- A. Upper
sideband
- B. Lower sideband
- C. Vestigial sideband
- D. Double sideband
G2A02 (B)
Which of the following modes is most
commonly used for voice communications on the 160, 75, and 40 meter bands?
- A. Upper sideband
- B. Lower
sideband
- C. Vestigial sideband
- D. Double sideband
G2A03 (A)
Which of the following is most
commonly used for SSB voice communications in the VHF and UHF bands?
- A. Upper
sideband
- B. Lower sideband
- C. Vestigial sideband
- D. Double sideband
G2A04 (A)
Which mode is most commonly used for
voice communications on the 17 and 12 meter bands?
- A. Upper
sideband
- B. Lower sideband
- C. Vestigial sideband
- D. Double sideband
G2A05 (C)
Which mode of voice communication is
most commonly used on the high frequency amateur bands?
- A. Frequency modulation
- B. Double sideband
- C. Single
sideband
- D. Phase modulation
G2A06 (B)
Which of the following is an
advantage when using single sideband as compared to other analog voice modes on
the HF amateur bands?
- A. Very high fidelity voice modulation
- B. Less
bandwidth used and higher power efficiency
- C. Ease of tuning on receive and immunity to impulse
noise
- D. Less subject to static crashes (atmospherics)
G2A07 (B)
Which of the following statements is
true of the single sideband (SSB) voice mode?
- A. Only one sideband and the carrier are transmitted;
the other sideband is suppressed
- B. Only one
sideband is transmitted; the other sideband and carrier are suppressed
- C. SSB voice transmissions have higher average power
than any other mode
- D. SSB is the only mode that is authorized on the 160, 75
and 40 meter amateur bands
G2A08 (B)
Which of the following is a
recommended way to break into a conversation when using phone?
- A. Say "QRZ" several times followed by your
call sign
- B. Say your call
sign during a break between transmissions from the other stations
- C. Say "Break. Break. Break." and wait for a
response
- D. Say "CQ" followed by the call sign of
either station
G2A09 (D)
Why do most amateur stations use
lower sideband on the 160, 75 and 40 meter bands?
- A. Lower sideband is more efficient than upper sideband
at these frequencies
- B. Lower sideband is the only sideband legal on these
frequency bands
- C. Because it is fully compatible with an AM detector
- D. Current
amateur practice is to use lower sideband on these frequency bands
G2A10 (B)
Which of the following statements is
true of SSB VOX operation?
- A. The received signal is more natural sounding
- B. VOX allows
"hands free" operation
- C. Frequency spectrum is conserved
- D. Provides more power output
G2A11 (C)
What does the expression "CQ
DX" usually indicate?
- A. A general call for any station
- B. The caller is listening for a station in Germany
- C. The caller is
looking for any station outside their own country
- D. A distress call
Group
G2B - Operating courtesy; band plans, emergencies, including drills and
emergency communications
G2B01 (C)
Which of the following is true
concerning access to frequencies?
- A. Nets always have priority
- B. QSO's in process always have priority
- C. No one has
priority access to frequencies, common courtesy should be a guide
- D. Contest operations must always yield to non-contest
use of frequencies
G2B02 (B)
What is the first thing you should
do if you are communicating with another amateur station and hear a station in
distress break in?
- A. Continue your communication because you were on
frequency first
- B. Acknowledge
the station in distress and determine what assistance may be needed
- C. Change to a different frequency
- D. Immediately cease all transmissions
G2B03 (C)
If propagation changes during your
contact and you notice increasing interference from other activity on the same
frequency, what should you do?
- A. Tell the interfering stations to change frequency
- B. Report the interference to your local Amateur
Auxiliary Coordinator
- C. As a common
courtesy, move your contact to another frequency
- D. Increase power to overcome interference
G2B04 (B)
When selecting a CW transmitting
frequency, what minimum frequency separation should you allow in order to
minimize interference to stations on adjacent frequencies?
- A. 5 to 50 Hz
- B. 150 to 500 Hz
- C. 1 to 3 kHz
- D. 3 to 6 kHz
G2B05 (B)
What is the customary minimum
frequency separation between SSB signals under normal conditions?
- A. Between 150 and 500 Hz
- B. Approximately
3 kHz
- C. Approximately 6 kHz
- D. Approximately 10 kHz
G2B06 (A)
What is a practical way to avoid
harmful interference when selecting a frequency to call CQ on CW or phone?
- A. Send
"QRL?" on CW, followed by your call sign; or, if using phone,
ask if the frequency is in use, followed by your call sign
- B. Listen for 2 minutes before calling CQ
- C. Send the letter "V" in Morse code several
times and listen for a response
- D. Send "QSY" on CW or if using phone,
announce "the frequency is in use", then send your call and
listen for a response
G2B07 (C)
Which of the following complies with
good amateur practice when choosing a frequency on which to initiate a call?
- A. Check to see if the channel is assigned to another
station
- B. Identify your station by transmitting your call sign
at least 3 times
- C. Follow the
voluntary band plan for the operating mode you intend to use
- D. All of these choices are correct
G2B08 (A)
What is the "DX window" in
a voluntary band plan?
- A. A portion of
the band that should not be used for contacts between stations within the
48 contiguous United States
- B. An FCC rule that prohibits contacts between stations
within the United States and possessions on that band segment
- C. An FCC rule that allows only digital contacts in
that portion of the band
- D. A portion of the band that has been voluntarily set
aside for digital contacts only
G2B09 (A)
Who may be the control operator of
an amateur station transmitting in RACES to assist relief operations during a
disaster?
- A. Only a person
holding an FCC issued amateur operator license
- B. Only a RACES net control operator
- C. A person holding an FCC issued amateur operator
license or an appropriate government official
- D. Any control operator when normal communication
systems are operational
G2B10 (D)
When may the FCC restrict normal
frequency operations of amateur stations participating in RACES?
- A. When they declare a temporary state of communication
emergency
- B. When they seize your equipment for use in disaster
communications
- C. Only when all amateur stations are instructed to
stop transmitting
- D. When the
President's War Emergency Powers have been invoked
G2B11 (A)
What frequency should be used to
send a distress call?
- A. Whatever
frequency has the best chance of communicating the distress message
- B. Only frequencies authorized for RACES or ARES
stations
- C. Only frequencies that are within your operating
privileges
- D. Only frequencies used by police, fire or emergency
medical services
G2B12 (C)
When is an amateur station allowed
to use any means at its disposal to assist another station in distress?
- A. Only when transmitting in RACES
- B. At any time when transmitting in an organized net
- C. At any time
during an actual emergency
- D. Only on authorized HF frequencies
Group
G2C - CW operating procedures and procedural signals, Q signals and common
abbreviations; full break in
G2C01 (D)
Which of the following describes
full break-in telegraphy (QSK)?
- A. Breaking stations send the Morse code prosign BK
- B. Automatic keyers are used
to send Morse code instead of hand keys
- C. An operator must activate a manual send/receive
switch before and after every transmission
- D. Transmitting
stations can receive between code characters and elements
G2C02 (A)
What should you do if a CW station
sends "QRS"?
- A. Send slower
- B. Change frequency
- C. Increase your power
- D. Repeat everything twice
G2C03 (C)
What does it mean when a CW operator
sends "KN" at the end of a transmission?
- A. Listening for novice stations
- B. Operating full break-in
- C. Listening
only for a specific station or stations
- D. Closing station now
G2C04 (D)
What does it mean when a CW operator
sends "CL" at the end of a transmission?
- A. Keep frequency clear
- B. Operating full break-in
- C. Listening only for a specific station or stations
- D. Closing
station
G2C05 (B)
What is the best speed to use
answering a CQ in Morse Code?
- A. The fastest speed at which you are comfortable
copying
- B. The speed at
which the CQ was sent
- C. A slow speed until contact is established
- D. 5 wpm, as all operators licensed to operate CW can
copy this speed
G2C06 (D)
What does the term "zero
beat" mean in CW operation?
- A. Matching the speed of the transmitting station
- B. Operating split to avoid interference on frequency
- C. Sending without error
- D. Matching your
transmit frequency to the frequency of a received signal.
G2C07 (A)
When sending CW, what does a
"C" mean when added to the RST report?
- A. Chirpy or
unstable signal
- B. Report was read from S meter reading rather than
estimated
- C. 100 percent copy
- D. Key clicks
G2C08 (C)
What prosign
is sent to indicate the end of a formal message when using CW?
G2C09 (C)
What does the Q signal
"QSL" mean?
- A. Send slower
- B. We have already confirmed by card
- C. I acknowledge
receipt
- D. We have worked before
G2C10 (B)
What does the Q signal
"QRQ" mean?
- A. Slow down
- B. Send faster
- C. Zero beat my signal
- D. Quitting operation
G2C11 (D)
What does the Q signal
"QRV" mean?
- A. You are sending too fast
- B. There is interference on the frequency
- C. I am quitting for the day
- D. I am ready to
receive messages
Group
G2D - Amateur Auxiliary; minimizing interference; HF operations
G2D01 (A)
What is the Amateur Auxiliary to the
FCC?
- A. Amateur
volunteers who are formally enlisted to monitor the airwaves for rules
violations
- B. Amateur volunteers who conduct amateur licensing
examinations
- C. Amateur volunteers who conduct frequency
coordination for amateur VHF repeaters
- D. Amateur volunteers who use their station equipment
to help civil defense organizations in times of emergency
G2D02 (B)
Which of the following are
objectives of the Amateur Auxiliary?
- A. To conduct efficient and orderly amateur licensing
examinations
- B. To encourage
amateur self regulation and compliance with the rules
- C. To coordinate repeaters for efficient and orderly
spectrum usage
- D. To provide emergency and public safety
communications
G2D03 (B)
What skills learned during
"hidden transmitter hunts" are of help to the Amateur Auxiliary?
- A. Identification of out of band operation
- B. Direction
finding used to locate stations violating FCC Rules
- C. Identification of different call signs
- D. Hunters have an opportunity to transmit on
non-amateur frequencies
G2D04 (B)
Which of the following describes an azimuthal projection map?
- A. A world map that shows accurate land masses
- B. A world map
projection centered on a particular location
- C. A world map that shows the angle at which an amateur
satellite crosses the equator
- D. A world map that shows the number of degrees
longitude that an amateur satellite appears to move westward at the
equator with each orbit
G2D05 (B)
When is it permissible to
communicate with amateur stations in countries outside the areas administered
by the Federal Communications Commission?
- A. Only when the foreign country has a formal third
party agreement filed with the FCC
- B. When the
contact is with amateurs in any country except those whose administrations
have notified the ITU that they object to such communications
- C. When the contact is with amateurs in any country as
long as the communication is conducted in English
- D. Only when the foreign country is a member of the
International Amateur Radio Union
G2D06 (C)
How is a directional antenna pointed
when making a "long-path" contact with another station?
- A. Toward the rising Sun
- B. Along the gray line
- C. 180 degrees
from its short-path heading
- D. Toward the north
G2D07 (A)
Which of the following is required
by the FCC rules when operating in the 60 meter band?
- A. If you are
using other than a dipole antenna, you must keep a record of the gain of
your antenna
- B. You must keep a log of the date, time, frequency,
power level and stations worked
- C. You must keep a log of all third party traffic
- D. You must keep a log of the manufacturer of your
equipment and the antenna used
G2D08 (D)
Why do many amateurs keep a log even
though the FCC doesn't require it?
- A. The ITU requires a log of all international contacts
- B. The ITU requires a log of all international third
party traffic
- C. The log provides evidence of operation needed to
renew a license without retest
- D. To help with
a reply if the FCC requests information
G2D09 (D)
What information is traditionally
contained in a station log?
- A. Date and time of contact
- B. Band and/or frequency of the contact
- C. Call sign of station contacted and the signal report
given
- D. All of these
choices are correct
G2D10 (B)
What is QRP operation?
- A. Remote piloted model control
- B. Low power
transmit operation
- C. Transmission using Quick Response Protocol
- D. Traffic relay procedure net operation
G2D11 (C)
Which HF antenna would be the best
to use for minimizing interference?
- A. A quarter wave vertical antenna
- B. An isotropic antenna
- C. A
unidirectional antenna
- D. An omnidirectional antenna
Group
G2E - Digital operating: procedures, procedural signals and common
abbreviations
G2E01 (D)
Which mode is normally used when
sending an RTTY signal via AFSK with an SSB transmitter?
- A. USB
- B. DSB
- C. CW
- D. LSB
G2E02 (A)
How many data bits are sent in a
single PSK31 character?
- A. The number
varies
- B. 5
- C. 7
- D. 8
G2E03 (C)
What part of a data packet contains
the routing and handling information?
- A. Directory
- B. Preamble
- C. Header
- D. Footer
G2E04 (B)
What segment of the 20 meter band is
most often used for data transmissions?
- A. 14.000 - 14.050 MHz
- B. 14.070 -
14.100 MHz
- C. 14.150 - 14.225 MHz
- D. 14.275 - 14.350 MHz
G2E05 (C)
Which of the following describes Baudot code?
- A. A 7-bit code, with start, stop and parity bits
- B. A code using error detection and correction
- C. A 5-bit code,
with additional start and stop bits
- D. A code using SELCAL and LISTEN
G2E06 (B)
What is the most common frequency
shift for RTTY emissions in the amateur HF bands?
- A. 85 Hz
- B. 170 Hz
- C. 425 Hz
- D. 850 Hz
G2E07 (B)
What does the abbreviation
"RTTY" stand for?
- A. Returning to you
- B. Radioteletype
- C. A general call to all digital stations
- D. Repeater transmission type
G2E08 (A)
What segment of the 80 meter band is
most commonly used for data transmissions?
- A. 3570 - 3600
kHz
- B. 3500 - 3525 kHz
- C. 3700 - 3750 kHz
- D. 3775 - 3825 kHz
G2E09 (D)
In what segment of the 20 meter band
are most PSK31 operations commonly found?
- A. At the bottom of the slow-scan TV segment, near 14.230
MHz
- B. At the top of the SSB phone segment near 14.325 MHz
- C. In the middle of the CW segment, near 14.100 MHz
- D. Below the
RTTY segment, near 14.070 MHz
G2E10 (D)
What is a major advantage of MFSK16
compared to other digital modes?
- A. It is much higher speed than RTTY
- B. It is much narrower bandwidth than most digital
modes
- C. It has built-in error correction
- D. It offers
good performance in weak signal environments without error correction
G2E11 (B)
What does the abbreviation
"MFSK" stand for?
- A. Manual Frequency Shift Keying
- B. Multi (or
Multiple) Frequency Shift Keying
- C. Manual Frequency Sideband Keying
- D. Multi (or Multiple) Frequency Sideband Keying
G2E12 (B)
How does the receiving station
respond to an ARQ data mode packet containing errors?
- A. Terminates the contact
- B. Requests the
packet be retransmitted
- C. Sends the packet back to the transmitting station
- D. Requests a change in transmitting protocol
G2E13 (A)
In the PACTOR protocol, what is
meant by an NAK response to a transmitted packet?
- A. The receiver
is requesting the packet be re-transmitted
- B. The receiver is reporting the packet was received
without error
- C. The receiver is busy decoding the packet
- D. The entire file has been received correctly
Subelement G3 - Radio Wave Propagation
Group
G3A - Sunspots and solar radiation; ionospheric
disturbances; propagation forecasting and indices
G3A01 (A)
What is the sunspot number?
- A. A measure of
solar activity based on counting sunspots and sunspot groups
- B. A 3 digit identifier which is used to track
individual sunspots
- C. A measure of the radio flux from the Sun measured at
10.7 cm
- D. A measure of the sunspot count based on radio flux
measurements
G3A02 (B)
What effect does a Sudden Ionospheric Disturbance have on the daytime ionospheric propagation of HF radio waves?
- A. It enhances propagation on all HF frequencies
- B. It disrupts
signals on lower frequencies more than those on higher frequencies
- C. It disrupts communications via satellite more than
direct communications
- D. None, because only areas on the night side of the
Earth are affected
G3A03 (C)
Approximately how long does it take
the increased ultraviolet and X-ray radiation from solar flares to affect
radio-wave propagation on the Earth?
- A. 28 days
- B. 1 to 2 hours
- C. 8 minutes
- D. 20 to 40 hours
G3A04 (D)
Which of the following amateur radio
HF frequencies are least reliable for long distance communications during
periods of low solar activity?
- A. 3.5 MHz and lower
- B. 7 MHz
- C. 10 MHz
- D. 21 MHz and
higher
G3A05 (D)
What is the solar-flux index?
- A. A measure of the highest frequency that is useful
for ionospheric propagation between two points
on the Earth
- B. A count of sunspots which is adjusted for solar
emissions
- C. Another name for the American sunspot number
- D. A measure of
solar radiation at 10.7 cm
G3A06 (D)
What is a geomagnetic storm?
- A. A sudden drop in the solar-flux index
- B. A thunderstorm which affects radio propagation
- C. Ripples in the ionosphere
- D. A temporary
disturbance in the Earth's magnetosphere
G3A07 (D)
At what point in the solar cycle
does the 20 meter band usually support worldwide propagation during daylight
hours?
- A. At the summer solstice
- B. Only at the maximum point of the solar cycle
- C. Only at the minimum point of the solar cycle
- D. At any point
in the solar cycle
G3A08 (B)
Which of the following effects can a
geomagnetic storm have on radio-wave propagation?
- A. Improved high-latitude HF propagation
- B. Degraded
high-latitude HF propagation
- C. Improved ground-wave propagation
- D. Improved chances of UHF ducting
G3A09 (C)
What effect do high sunspot numbers
have on radio communications?
- A. High-frequency radio signals become weak and
distorted
- B. Frequencies above 300 MHz become usable for
long-distance communication
- C. Long-distance
communication in the upper HF and lower VHF range is enhanced
- D. Microwave communications become unstable
G3A10 (C)
What causes HF propagation
conditions to vary periodically in a 28-day cycle?
- A. Long term oscillations in the upper atmosphere
- B. Cyclic variation in the Earth's radiation belts
- C. The Sun's
rotation on its axis
- D. The position of the Moon in its orbit
G3A11 (D)
Approximately how long is the
typical sunspot cycle?
- A. 8 minutes
- B. 40 hours
- C. 28 days
- D. 11 years
G3A12 (B)
What does the K-index indicate?
- A. The relative position of sunspots on the surface of
the Sun
- B. The short
term stability of the Earth's magnetic field
- C. The stability of the Sun's magnetic field
- D. The solar radio flux at Boulder, Colorado
G3A13 (C)
What does the A-index indicate?
- A. The relative position of sunspots on the surface of
the Sun
- B. The amount of polarization of the Sun's electric
field
- C. The long term
stability of the Earth's geomagnetic field
- D. The solar radio flux at Boulder, Colorado
G3A14 (B)
How are radio communications usually
affected by the charged particles that reach the Earth from solar coronal
holes?
- A. HF communications are improved
- B. HF
communications are disturbed
- C. VHF/UHF ducting is improved
- D. VHF/UHF ducting is disturbed
G3A15 (D)
How long does it take charged
particles from coronal mass ejections to affect radio-wave propagation on the
Earth?
- A. 28 days
- B. 14 days
- C. 4 to 8 minutes
- D. 20 to 40
hours
G3A16 (A)
What is a possible benefit to radio
communications resulting from periods of high geomagnetic activity?
- A. Aurora that
can reflect VHF signals
- B. Higher signal strength for HF signals passing
through the polar regions
- C. Improved HF long path propagation
- D. Reduced long delayed echoes
Group
G3B - Maximum Usable Frequency; Lowest Usable Frequency; propagation
G3B01 (D)
How might a sky-wave signal sound if
it arrives at your receiver by both short path and long path propagation?
- A. Periodic fading approximately every 10 seconds
- B. Signal strength increased by 3 dB
- C. The signal might be cancelled causing severe
attenuation
- D. A
well-defined echo might be heard
G3B02 (A)
Which of the following is a good
indicator of the possibility of sky-wave propagation on the 6 meter band?
- A. Short skip
sky-wave propagation on the 10 meter band
- B. Long skip sky-wave propagation on the 10 meter band
- C. Severe attenuation of signals on the 10 meter band
- D. Long delayed echoes on the 10 meter band
G3B03 (A)
Which of the following applies when
selecting a frequency for lowest attenuation when transmitting on HF?
- A. Select a
frequency just below the MUF
- B. Select a frequency just above the LUF
- C. Select a frequency just below the critical frequency
- D. Select a frequency just above the critical frequency
G3B04 (A)
What is a reliable way to determine
if the Maximum Usable Frequency (MUF) is high enough to support skip
propagation between your station and a distant location on frequencies between
14 and 30 MHz?
- A. Listen for
signals from an international beacon
- B. Send a series of dots on the band and listen for
echoes from your signal
- C. Check the strength of TV signals from Western Europe
- D. Check the strength of signals in the MF AM broadcast
band
G3B05 (A)
What usually happens to radio waves
with frequencies below the Maximum Usable Frequency (MUF) and above the Lowest
Usable Frequency (LUF) when they are sent into the ionosphere?
- A. They are bent
back to the Earth
- B. They pass through the ionosphere
- C. They are amplified by interaction with the
ionosphere
- D. They are bent and trapped in the ionosphere to
circle the Earth
G3B06 (C)
What usually happens to radio waves
with frequencies below the Lowest Usable Frequency (LUF)?
- A. They are bent back to the Earth
- B. They pass through the ionosphere
- C. They are
completely absorbed by the ionosphere
- D. They are bent and trapped in the ionosphere to circle
the Earth
G3B07 (A)
What does LUF stand for?
- A. The Lowest
Usable Frequency for communications between two points
- B. The Longest Universal Function for communications
between two points
- C. The Lowest Usable Frequency during a 24 hour period
- D. The Longest Universal Function during a 24 hour
period
G3B08 (B)
What does MUF stand for?
- A. The Minimum Usable Frequency for communications
between two points
- B. The Maximum
Usable Frequency for communications between two points
- C. The Minimum Usable Frequency during a 24 hour period
- D. The Maximum Usable Frequency during a 24 hour period
G3B09 (C)
What is the approximate maximum
distance along the Earth's surface that is normally covered in one hop using
the F2 region?
- A. 180 miles
- B. 1,200 miles
- C. 2,500 miles
- D. 12,000 miles
G3B10 (B)
What is the approximate maximum
distance along the Earth's surface that is normally covered in one hop using
the E region?
- A. 180 miles
- B. 1,200 miles
- C. 2,500 miles
- D. 12,000 miles
G3B11 (A)
What happens to HF propagation when
the Lowest Usable Frequency (LUF) exceeds the Maximum Usable Frequency (MUF)?
- A. No HF radio
frequency will support ordinary skywave
communications over the path
- B. HF communications over the path are enhanced
- C. Double hop propagation along the path is more common
- D. Propagation over the path on all HF frequencies is
enhanced
G3B12 (D)
What factors affect the Maximum
Usable Frequency (MUF)?
- A. Path distance and location
- B. Time of day and season
- C. Solar radiation and ionospheric
disturbances
- D. All of these
choices are correct
Group
G3C - Ionospheric layers; critical angle and
frequency; HF scatter; Near Vertical Incidence Sky
waves
G3C01 (A)
Which of the following ionospheric layers is closest to the surface of the Earth?
- A. The D layer
- B. The E layer
- C. The F1 layer
- D. The F2 layer
G3C02 (A)
Where on the Earth do ionospheric layers reach their maximum height?
- A. Where the Sun
is overhead
- B. Where the Sun is on the opposite side of the Earth
- C. Where the Sun is rising
- D. Where the Sun has just set
G3C03 (C)
Why is the F2 region mainly
responsible for the longest distance radio wave propagation?
- A. Because it is the densest ionospheric
layer
- B. Because it does not absorb radio waves as much as
other ionospheric regions
- C. Because it is
the highest ionospheric region
- D. All of these choices are correct
G3C04 (D)
What does the term "critical
angle" mean as used in radio wave propagation?
- A. The long path azimuth of a distant station
- B. The short path azimuth of a distant station
- C. The lowest takeoff angle that will return a radio
wave to the Earth under specific ionospheric
conditions
- D. The highest
takeoff angle that will return a radio wave to the Earth under specific ionospheric conditions
G3C05 (C)
Why is long distance communication
on the 40, 60, 80 and 160 meter bands more difficult during the day?
- A. The F layer absorbs signals at these frequencies
during daylight hours
- B. The F layer is unstable during daylight hours
- C. The D layer
absorbs signals at these frequencies during daylight hours
- D. The E layer is unstable during daylight hours
G3C06 (B)
What is a characteristic of HF
scatter signals?
- A. They have high intelligibility
- B. They have a
wavering sound
- C. They have very large swings in signal strength
- D. All of these choices are correct
G3C07 (D)
What makes HF scatter signals often
sound distorted?
- A. The ionospheric layer
involved is unstable
- B. Ground waves are absorbing much of the signal
- C. The E-region is not present
- D. Energy is
scattered into the skip zone through several different radio wave paths
G3C08 (A)
Why are HF scatter signals in the
skip zone usually weak?
- A. Only a small
part of the signal energy is scattered into the skip zone
- B. Signals are scattered from the magnetosphere which
is not a good reflector
- C. Propagation is through ground waves which absorb
most of the signal energy
- D. Propagations is through ducts in F region which
absorb most of the energy
G3C09 (B)
What type of radio wave propagation
allows a signal to be detected at a distance too far for ground wave
propagation but too near for normal sky-wave propagation?
- A. Faraday rotation
- B. Scatter
- C. Sporadic-E skip
- D. Short-path skip
G3C10 (D)
Which of the following might be an
indication that signals heard on the HF bands are being received via scatter
propagation?
- A. The communication is during a sunspot maximum
- B. The communication is during a sudden ionospheric disturbance
- C. The signal is heard on a frequency below the Maximum
Usable Frequency
- D. The signal is
heard on a frequency above the Maximum Usable Frequency
G3C11 (B)
Which of the following antenna types
will be most effective for skip communications on 40 meters during the day?
- A. Vertical antennas
- B. Horizontal
dipoles placed between 1/8 and 1/4 wavelength above the ground
- C. Left-hand circularly polarized antennas
- D. Right-hand circularly polarized antenna
G3C12 (D)
Which ionospheric
layer is the most absorbent of long skip signals during daylight hours on
frequencies below 10 MHz?
- A. The F2 layer
- B. The F1 layer
- C. The E layer
- D. The D layer
G3C13 (B)
What is Near Vertical Incidence
Sky-wave (NVIS) propagation?
- A. Propagation near the MUF
- B. Short
distance HF propagation using high elevation angles
- C. Long path HF propagation at sunrise and sunset
- D. Double hop propagation near the LUF
Subelement G4 - Amateur Radio Practices
Group
G4A - Station Operation and setup
G4A01 (B)
What is the purpose of the
"notch filter" found on many HF transceivers?
- A. To restrict the transmitter voice bandwidth
- B. To reduce
interference from carriers in the receiver passband
- C. To eliminate receiver interference from impulse
noise sources
- D. To enhance the reception of a specific frequency on
a crowded band
G4A02 (C)
What is one advantage of selecting
the opposite or "reverse" sideband when receiving CW signals on a
typical HF transceiver?
- A. Interference from impulse noise will be eliminated
- B. More stations can be accommodated within a given
signal passband
- C. It may be
possible to reduce or eliminate interference from other signals
- D. Accidental out of band operation can be prevented
G4A03 (C)
What is normally meant by operating
a transceiver in "split" mode?
- A. The radio is operating at half power
- B. The transceiver is operating from an external power
source
- C. The
transceiver is set to different transmit and receive frequencies
- D. The transmitter is emitting a SSB signal, as opposed
to DSB operation
G4A04 (B)
What reading on the plate current
meter of a vacuum tube RF power amplifier indicates correct adjustment of the
plate tuning control?
- A. A pronounced peak
- B. A pronounced
dip
- C. No change will be observed
- D. A slow, rhythmic oscillation
G4A05 (C)
What is a purpose of using Automatic
Level Control (ALC) with a RF power amplifier?
- A. To balance the transmitter audio frequency response
- B. To reduce harmonic radiation
- C. To reduce
distortion due to excessive drive
- D. To increase overall efficiency
G4A06 (C)
What type of device is often used to
enable matching the transmitter output to an impedance
other than 50 ohms?
- A. Balanced modulator
- B. SWR Bridge
- C. Antenna
coupler
- D. Q Multiplier
G4A07 (D)
What condition can lead to permanent
damage when using a solid-state RF power amplifier?
- A. Exceeding the Maximum Usable Frequency
- B. Low input SWR
- C. Shorting the input signal to ground
- D. Excessive
drive power
G4A08 (D)
What is the correct adjustment for
the load or coupling control of a vacuum tube RF power amplifier?
- A. Minimum SWR on the antenna
- B. Minimum plate current without exceeding maximum
allowable grid current
- C. Highest plate voltage while minimizing grid current
- D. Maximum power
output without exceeding maximum allowable plate current
G4A09 (C)
Why is a time delay sometimes
included in a transmitter keying circuit?
- A. To prevent stations from talking over each other
- B. To allow the transmitter power regulators to charge
properly
- C. To allow time
for transmit-receive changeover operations to complete properly before RF
output is allowed
- D. To allow time for a warning signal to be sent to
other stations
G4A10 (B)
What is the purpose of an electronic
keyer?
- A. Automatic transmit/receive switching
- B. Automatic
generation of strings of dots and dashes for CW operation
- C. VOX operation
- D. Computer interface for PSK and RTTY operation
G4A11 (A)
Which of the following is a use for
the IF shift control on a receiver?
- A. To avoid
interference from stations very close to the receive frequency
- B. To change frequency rapidly
- C. To permit listening on a different frequency from
that on which you are transmitting
- D. To tune in stations that are slightly off frequency
without changing your transmit frequency
G4A12 (C)
Which of the following is a common
use for the dual VFO feature on a transceiver?
- A. To allow transmitting on two frequencies at once
- B. To permit full duplex operation, that is
transmitting and receiving at the same time
- C. To permit
ease of monitoring the transmit and receive frequencies when they are not
the same
- D. To facilitate computer interface
G4A13 (A)
What is one reason to use the
attenuator function that is present on many HF transceivers?
- A. To reduce
signal overload due to strong incoming signals
- B. To reduce the transmitter power when driving a
linear amplifier
- C. To reduce power consumption when operating from
batteries
- D. To slow down received CW signals for better copy
G4A14 (B)
How should the transceiver audio
input be adjusted when transmitting PSK31 data signals?
- A. So that the transceiver is at maximum rated output
power
- B. So that the
transceiver ALC system does not activate
- C. So that the transceiver operates at no more than 25%
of rated power
- D. So that the transceiver ALC indicator shows half
scale
Group
G4B - Test and monitoring equipment; two-tone test
G4B01 (D)
What item of test equipment contains
horizontal and vertical channel amplifiers?
- A. An ohmmeter
- B. A signal generator
- C. An ammeter
- D. An
oscilloscope
G4B02 (D)
Which of the following is an
advantage of an oscilloscope versus a digital voltmeter?
- A. An oscilloscope uses less power
- B. Complex impedances can be easily measured
- C. Input impedance is much lower
- D. Complex
waveforms can be measured
G4B03 (A)
Which of the following is the best
instrument to use when checking the keying waveform of a CW transmitter?
- A. An
oscilloscope
- B. A field-strength meter
- C. A sidetone monitor
- D. A wavemeter
G4B04 (D)
What signal source is connected to
the vertical input of an oscilloscope when checking the RF envelope pattern of
a transmitted signal?
- A. The local oscillator of the transmitter
- B. An external RF oscillator
- C. The transmitter balanced mixer output
- D. The
attenuated RF output of the transmitter
G4B05 (D)
Why is high input impedance
desirable for a voltmeter?
- A. It improves the frequency response
- B. It decreases battery consumption in the meter
- C. It improves the resolution of the readings
- D. It decreases
the loading on circuits being measured
G4B06 (C)
What is an advantage of a digital
voltmeter as compared to an analog voltmeter?
- A. Better for measuring computer circuits
- B. Better for RF measurements
- C. Better
precision for most uses
- D. Faster response
G4B07 (A)
Which of the following might be a
use for a field strength meter?
- A. Close-in
radio direction-finding
- B. A modulation monitor for a frequency or phase
modulation transmitter
- C. An overmodulation
indicator for a SSB transmitter
- D. A keying indicator for a RTTY or packet transmitter
G4B08 (A)
Which of the following instruments
may be used to monitor relative RF output when making antenna and transmitter
adjustments?
- A. A
field-strength meter
- B. An antenna noise bridge
- C. A multimeter
- D. A Q meter
G4B09 (B)
Which of the following can be
determined with a field strength meter?
- A. The radiation resistance of an antenna
- B. The radiation
pattern of an antenna
- C. The presence and amount of phase distortion of a
transmitter
- D. The presence and amount of amplitude distortion of a
transmitter
G4B10 (A)
Which of the following can be
determined with a directional wattmeter?
- A. Standing wave
ratio
- B. Antenna front-to-back ratio
- C. RF interference
- D. Radio wave propagation
G4B11 (C)
Which of the following must be
connected to an antenna analyzer when it is being used for SWR measurements?
- A. Receiver
- B. Transmitter
- C. Antenna and
feed line
- D. All of these choices are correct
G4B12 (B)
What problem can occur when making
measurements on an antenna system with an antenna analyzer?
- A. SWR readings may be incorrect if the antenna is too close
to the Earth
- B. Strong
signals from nearby transmitters can affect the accuracy of measurements
- C. The analyzer can be damaged if measurements outside
the ham bands are attempted
- D. Connecting the analyzer to an antenna can cause it
to absorb harmonics
G4B13 (C)
What is a use for an antenna
analyzer other than measuring the SWR of an antenna system?
- A. Measuring the front to back ratio of an antenna
- B. Measuring the turns ratio of a power transformer
- C. Determining
the impedance of an unknown or unmarked coaxial cable
- D. Determining the gain of a directional antenna
G4B14 (D)
What is an instance in which the use
of an instrument with analog readout may be preferred over an instrument with a
numerical digital readout?
- A. When testing logic circuits
- B. When high precision is desired
- C. When measuring the frequency of an oscillator
- D. When
adjusting tuned circuits
G4B15 (A)
What type of transmitter performance
does a two-tone test analyze?
- A. Linearity
- B. Carrier and undesired sideband suppression
- C. Percentage of frequency modulation
- D. Percentage of carrier phase shift
G4B16 (B)
What signals are used to conduct a
two-tone test?
- A. Two audio signals of the same frequency shifted
90-degrees
- B. Two
non-harmonically related audio signals
- C. Two swept frequency tones
- D. Two audio frequency range square wave signals of
equal amplitude
Group
G4C - Interference with consumer electronics; grounding; DSP
G4C01 (B)
Which of the following might be
useful in reducing RF interference to audio-frequency devices?
- A. Bypass inductor
- B. Bypass
capacitor
- C. Forward-biased diode
- D. Reverse-biased diode
G4C02 (C)
Which of the following could be a
cause of interference covering a wide range of frequencies?
- A. Not using a balun or line
isolator to feed balanced antennas
- B. Lack of rectification of the transmitter's signal in
power conductors
- C. Arcing at a
poor electrical connection
- D. The use of horizontal rather than vertical antennas
G4C03 (C)
What sound is heard from an audio
device or telephone if there is interference from a nearby single-sideband
phone transmitter?
- A. A steady hum whenever the transmitter is on the air
- B. On-and-off humming or clicking
- C. Distorted
speech
- D. Clearly audible speech
G4C04 (A)
What is the effect on an audio
device or telephone system if there is interference from a nearby CW
transmitter?
- A. On-and-off
humming or clicking
- B. A CW signal at a nearly pure audio frequency
- C. A chirpy CW signal
- D. Severely distorted audio
G4C05 (D)
What might be the problem if you
receive an RF burn when touching your equipment while transmitting on an HF
band, assuming the equipment is connected to a ground rod?
- A. Flat braid rather than round wire has been used for
the ground wire
- B. Insulated wire has been used for the ground wire
- C. The ground rod is resonant
- D. The ground
wire has high impedance on that frequency
G4C06 (C)
What effect can be caused by a
resonant ground connection?
- A. Overheating of ground straps
- B. Corrosion of the ground rod
- C. High RF
voltages on the enclosures of station equipment
- D. A ground loop
G4C07 (A)
What is one good way to avoid
unwanted effects of stray RF energy in an amateur station?
- A. Connect all
equipment grounds together
- B. Install an RF filter in series with the ground wire
- C. Use a ground loop for best conductivity
- D. Install a few ferrite beads on the ground wire where
it connects to your station
G4C08 (A)
Which of the following would reduce
RF interference caused by common-mode current on an audio cable?
- A. Placing a
ferrite bead around the cable
- B. Adding series capacitors to the conductors
- C. Adding shunt inductors to the conductors
- D. Adding an additional insulating jacket to the cable
G4C09 (D)
How can a ground loop be avoided?
- A. Connect all ground conductors in series
- B. Connect the AC neutral conductor to the ground wire
- C. Avoid using lock washers and star washers when
making ground connections
- D. Connect all
ground conductors to a single point
G4C10 (A)
What could be a symptom of a ground
loop somewhere in your station?
- A. You receive
reports of "hum" on your station's transmitted signal
- B. The SWR reading for one or more antennas is suddenly
very high
- C. An item of station equipment starts to draw
excessive amounts of current
- D. You receive reports of harmonic interference from
your station
G4C11 (B)
Which of the following is one use
for a Digital Signal Processor in an amateur station?
- A. To provide adequate grounding
- B. To remove
noise from received signals
- C. To increase antenna gain
- D. To increase antenna bandwidth
G4C12 (A)
Which of the following is an
advantage of a receiver Digital Signal Processor IF filter as compared to an
analog filter?
- A. A wide range
of filter bandwidths and shapes can be created
- B. Fewer digital components are required
- C. Mixing products are greatly reduced
- D. The DSP filter is much more effective at VHF
frequencies
G4C13 (B)
Which of the following can perform
automatic notching of interfering carriers?
- A. Band-pass tuning
- B. A Digital
Signal Processor (DSP) filter
- C. Balanced mixing
- D. A noise limiter
Group
G4D - Speech processors; S meters; sideband operation near band edges
G4D01 (A)
What is the purpose of a speech
processor as used in a modern transceiver?
- A. Increase the
intelligibility of transmitted phone signals during poor conditions
- B. Increase transmitter bass response for more natural
sounding SSB signals
- C. Prevent distortion of voice signals
- D. Decrease high-frequency voice output to prevent out
of band operation
G4D02 (B)
Which of the following describes how
a speech processor affects a transmitted single sideband phone signal?
- A. It increases peak power
- B. It increases
average power
- C. It reduces harmonic distortion
- D. It reduces intermodulation
distortion
G4D03 (D)
Which of the following can be the
result of an incorrectly adjusted speech processor?
- A. Distorted speech
- B. Splatter
- C. Excessive background pickup
- D. All of these
choices are correct
G4D04 (C)
What does an S meter measure?
- A. Conductance
- B. Impedance
- C. Received
signal strength
- D. Transmitter power output
G4D05 (D)
How does an S meter reading of 20 dB
over S-9 compare to an S-9 signal, assuming a properly calibrated S meter?
- A. It is 10 times weaker
- B. It is 20 times weaker
- C. It is 20 times stronger
- D. It is 100
times stronger
G4D06 (A)
Where is an S meter found?
- A. In a receiver
- B. In an SWR bridge
- C. In a transmitter
- D. In a conductance bridge
G4D07 (C)
How much must the power output of a
transmitter be raised to change the S- meter reading on a distant receiver from
S8 to S9?
- A. Approximately 1.5 times
- B. Approximately 2 times
- C. Approximately
4 times
- D. Approximately 8 times
G4D08 (C)
What frequency range is occupied by
a 3 kHz LSB signal when the displayed carrier frequency is set to 7.178 MHz?
- A. 7.178 to 7.181 MHz
- B. 7.178 to 7.184 MHz
- C. 7.175 to
7.178 MHz
- D. 7.1765 to 7.1795 MHz
G4D09 (B)
What frequency range is occupied by
a 3 kHz USB signal with the displayed carrier frequency set to 14.347 MHz?
- A. 14.347 to 14.647 MHz
- B. 14.347 to
14.350 MHz
- C. 14.344 to 14.347 MHz
- D. 14.3455 to 14.3485 MHz
G4D10 (A)
How close to the lower edge of the
40 meter General Class phone segment should your displayed carrier frequency be
when using 3 kHz wide LSB?
- A. 3 kHz above
the edge of the segment
- B. 3 kHz below the edge of the segment
- C. Your displayed carrier frequency may be set at the
edge of the segment
- D. Center your signal on the edge of the segment
G4D11 (B)
How close to the upper edge of the
20 meter General Class band should your displayed carrier frequency be when
using 3 kHz wide USB?
- A. 3 kHz above the edge of the band
- B. 3 kHz below
the edge of the band
- C. Your displayed carrier frequency may be set at the
edge of the band
- D. Center your signal on the edge of the band
Group
G4E - HF mobile radio installations; emergency and battery powered operation
G4E01 (C)
What is a "capacitance
hat", when referring to a mobile antenna?
- A. A device to increase the power handling capacity of
a mobile whip antenna
- B. A device that allows automatic band-changing for a
mobile antenna
- C. A device to
electrically lengthen a physically short antenna
- D. A device that allows remote tuning of a mobile
antenna
G4E02 (D)
What is the purpose of a
"corona ball" on a HF mobile antenna?
- A. To narrow the operating bandwidth of the antenna
- B. To increase the "Q" of the antenna
- C. To reduce the chance of damage if the antenna should
strike an object
- D. To reduce
high voltage discharge from the tip of the antenna
G4E03 (A)
Which of the following direct, fused
power connections would be the best for a 100-watt HF mobile installation?
- A. To the
battery using heavy gauge wire
- B. To the alternator or generator using heavy gauge
wire
- C. To the battery using resistor wire
- D. To the alternator or generator using resistor wire
G4E04 (B)
Why is it best NOT to draw the DC
power for a 100-watt HF transceiver from an automobile's auxiliary power
socket?
- A. The socket is not wired with an RF-shielded power
cable
- B. The socket's
wiring may be inadequate for the current being drawn by thetransceiver
- C. The DC polarity of the socket is reversed from the
polarity of modern HFtransceivers
- D. Drawing more than 50 watts from this socket could
cause the engine to overheat
G4E05 (C)
Which of the following most limits
the effectiveness of an HF mobile transceiver operating in the 75 meter band?
- A. "Picket Fencing" signal variation
- B. The wire gauge of the DC power line to the transceiver
- C. The antenna
system
- D. FCC rules limiting mobile output power on the 75
meter band
G4E06 (C)
What is one disadvantage of using a
shortened mobile antenna as opposed to a full size antenna?
- A. Short antennas are more likely to cause distortion of
transmitted signals
- B. Short antennas can only receive vertically polarized
signals
- C. Operating
bandwidth may be very limited
- D. Harmonic radiation may increase
G4E07 (D)
Which of the following is the most
likely to cause interfering signals to be heard in the receiver of an HF mobile
installation in a recent model vehicle?
- A. The battery charging system
- B. The anti-lock braking system
- C. The anti-theft circuitry
- D. The vehicle
control computer
G4E08 (A)
What is the name of the process by
which sunlight is changed directly into electricity?
- A. Photovoltaic
conversion
- B. Photon emission
- C. Photosynthesis
- D. Photon decomposition
G4E09 (B)
What is the approximate open-circuit
voltage from a modern, well-illuminated photovoltaic cell?
- A. 0.02 VDC
- B. 0.5 VDC
- C. 0.2 VDC
- D. 1.38 VDC
G4E10 (B)
What is the reason a series diode is
connected between a solar panel and a storage battery that is being charged by
the panel?
- A. The diode serves to regulate the charging voltage to
prevent overcharge
- B. The diode
prevents self discharge of the battery though the panel during times of
low or no illumination
- C. The diode limits the current flowing from the panel
to a safe value
- D. The diode greatly increases the efficiency during
times of high illumination
G4E11 (C)
Which of the following is a
disadvantage of using wind as the primary source of power for an emergency
station?
- A. The conversion efficiency from mechanical energy to
electrical energy is less than 2 percent
- B. The voltage and current ratings of such systems are
not compatible with amateur equipment
- C. A large
energy storage system is needed to supply power when the wind is not
blowing
- D. All of these choices are correct
Subelement G5 - Electrical Principles
Group
G5A - Reactance; inductance; capacitance; impedance; impedance matching
G5A01 (C)
What is impedance?
- A. The electric charge stored by a capacitor
- B. The inverse of resistance
- C. The
opposition to the flow of current in an AC circuit
- D. The force of repulsion between two similar electric
fields
G5A02 (B)
What is reactance?
- A. Opposition to the flow of direct current caused by
resistance
- B. Opposition to
the flow of alternating current caused by capacitance or inductance
- C. A property of ideal resistors in AC circuits
- D. A large spark produced at switch contacts when an
inductor is de-energized
G5A03 (D)
Which of the following causes
opposition to the flow of alternating current in an inductor?
- A. Conductance
- B. Reluctance
- C. Admittance
- D. Reactance
G5A04 (C)
Which of the following causes
opposition to the flow of alternating current in a capacitor?
- A. Conductance
- B. Reluctance
- C. Reactance
- D. Admittance
G5A05 (D)
How does an inductor react to AC?
- A. As the frequency of the applied AC increases, the
reactance decreases
- B. As the amplitude of the applied AC increases, the
reactance increases
- C. As the amplitude of the applied AC increases, the
reactance decreases
- D. As the
frequency of the applied AC increases, the reactance increases
G5A06 (A)
How does a capacitor react to AC?
- A. As the
frequency of the applied AC increases, the reactance decreases
- B. As the frequency of the applied AC increases, the
reactance increases
- C. As the amplitude of the applied AC increases, the
reactance increases
- D. As the amplitude of the applied AC increases, the
reactance decreases
G5A07 (D)
What happens when the impedance of
an electrical load is equal to the internal impedance of the power source?
- A. The source delivers minimum power to the load
- B. The electrical load is shorted
- C. No current can flow through the circuit
- D. The source
can deliver maximum power to the load
G5A08 (A)
Why is impedance matching important?
- A. So the source
can deliver maximum power to the load
- B. So the load will draw minimum power from the source
- C. To ensure that there is less resistance than
reactance in the circuit
- D. To ensure that the resistance and reactance in the
circuit are equal
G5A09 (B)
What unit is used to measure
reactance?
- A. Farad
- B. Ohm
- C. Ampere
- D. Siemens
G5A10 (B)
What unit is used to measure
impedance?
- A. Volt
- B. Ohm
- C. Ampere
- D. Watt
G5A11 (A)
Which of the following describes one
method of impedance matching between two AC circuits?
- A. Insert an LC
network between the two circuits
- B. Reduce the power output of the first circuit
- C. Increase the power output of the first circuit
- D. Insert a circulator between the two circuits
G5A12 (B)
What is one reason to use an
impedance matching transformer?
- A. To minimize transmitter power output
- B. To maximize
the transfer of power
- C. To reduce power supply ripple
- D. To minimize radiation resistance
G5A13 (D)
Which of the following devices can
be used for impedance matching at radio frequencies?
- A. A transformer
- B. A Pi-network
- C. A length of transmission line
- D. All of these
choices are correct
Group
G5B - The Decibel; current and voltage dividers; electrical power calculations;
sine wave root-mean-square (RMS) values; PEP calculations
G5B01 (B)
A two-times increase or decrease in
power results in a change of how many dB?
- A. Approximately 2 dB
- B. Approximately
3 dB
- C. Approximately 6 dB
- D. Approximately 12 dB
G5B02 (C)
How does the total current relate to
the individual currents in each branch of a parallel circuit?
- A. It equals the average of each branch current
- B. It decreases as more parallel branches are added to
the circuit
- C. It equals the
sum of the currents through each branch
- D. It is the sum of the reciprocal of each individual
voltage drop
G5B03 (B)
How many watts of electrical power
are used if 400 VDC is supplied to an 800-ohm load?
- A. 0.5 watts
- B. 200 watts
- C. 400 watts
- D. 3200 watts
G5B04 (A)
How many watts of electrical power
are used by a 12-VDC light bulb that draws 0.2 amperes?
- A. 2.4 watts
- B. 24 watts
- C. 6 watts
- D. 60 watts
G5B05 (A)
How many watts are dissipated when a
current of 7.0 milliamperes flows through 1.25 kilohms?
- A. Approximately
61 milliwatts
- B. Approximately 61 watts
- C. Approximately 11 milliwatts
- D. Approximately 11 watts
G5B06 (B)
What is the output PEP from a
transmitter if an oscilloscope measures 200 volts peak-to-peak across a 50-ohm
dummy load connected to the transmitter output?
- A. 1.4 watts
- B. 100 watts
- C. 353.5 watts
- D. 400 watts
G5B07 (C)
Which value of an AC signal results
in the same power dissipation as a DC voltage of the same value?
- A. The peak-to-peak value
- B. The peak value
- C. The RMS value
- D. The reciprocal of the RMS value
G5B08 (D)
What is the peak-to-peak voltage of
a sine wave that has an RMS voltage of 120 volts?
- A. 84.8 volts
- B. 169.7 volts
- C. 240.0 volts
- D. 339.4 volts
G5B09 (B)
What is the RMS voltage of a sine
wave with a value of 17 volts peak?
- A. 8.5 volts
- B. 12 volts
- C. 24 volts
- D. 34 volts
G5B10 (C)
What percentage of power loss would
result from a transmission line loss of 1 dB?
- A. 10.9%
- B. 12.2%
- C. 20.5%
- D. 25.9%
G5B11 (B)
What is the ratio of peak envelope
power to average power for an unmodulated carrier?
- A. .707
- B. 1.00
- C. 1.414
- D. 2.00
G5B12 (B)
What would be the RMS voltage across
a 50-ohm dummy load dissipating 1200 watts?
- A. 173 volts
- B. 245 volts
- C. 346 volts
- D. 692 volts
G5B13 (B)
What is the output PEP of an unmodulated carrier if an average reading wattmeter
connected to the transmitter output indicates 1060 watts?
- A. 530 watts
- B. 1060 watts
- C. 1500 watts
- D. 2120 watts
G5B14 (B)
What is the output PEP from a
transmitter if an oscilloscope measures 500 volts peak-to-peak across a 50-ohm
resistor connected to the transmitter output?
- A. 8.75 watts
- B. 625 watts
- C. 2500 watts
- D. 5000 watts
Group
G5C - Resistors, capacitors and inductors in series and parallel; transformers
G5C01 (C)
What causes a voltage to appear
across the secondary winding of a transformer when an AC voltage source is
connected across its primary winding?
- A. Capacitive coupling
- B. Displacement current coupling
- C. Mutual
inductance
- D. Mutual capacitance
G5C02 (B)
Which part of a transformer is
normally connected to the incoming source of energy?
- A. The secondary
- B. The primary
- C. The core
- D. The plates
G5C03 (B)
Which of the following components
should be added to an existing resistor to increase the resistance?
- A. A resistor in parallel
- B. A resistor in
series
- C. A capacitor in series
- D. A capacitor in parallel
G5C04 (C)
What is the total resistance of
three 100-ohm resistors in parallel?
- A. .30 ohms
- B. .33 ohms
- C. 33.3 ohms
- D. 300 ohms
G5C05 (C)
If three equal value resistors in
parallel produce 50 ohms of resistance, and the same three resistors in series
produce 450 ohms, what is the value of each resistor?
- A. 1500 ohms
- B. 90 ohms
- C. 150 ohms
- D. 175 ohms
G5C06 (C)
What is the RMS voltage across a
500-turn secondary winding in a transformer if the 2250-turn primary is
connected to 120 VAC?
- A. 2370 volts
- B. 540 volts
- C. 26.7 volts
- D. 5.9 volts
G5C07 (A)
What is the turns
ratio of a transformer used to match an audio amplifier having a 600-ohm output
impedance to a speaker having a 4-ohm impedance?
- A. 12.2 to 1
- B. 24.4 to 1
- C. 150 to 1
- D. 300 to 1
G5C08 (D)
What is the equivalent capacitance
of two 5000 picofarad capacitors and one 750 picofarad capacitor connected in parallel?
- A. 576.9 picofarads
- B. 1733 picofarads
- C. 3583 picofarads
- D. 10750 picofarads
G5C09 (C)
What is the capacitance of three 100
microfarad capacitors connected in series?
- A. .30 microfarads
- B. .33 microfarads
- C. 33.3
microfarads
- D. 300 microfarads
G5C10 (C)
What is the inductance of three 10 millihenry inductors connected in parallel?
- A. .30 Henrys
- B. 3.3 Henrys
- C. 3.3 millihenrys
- D. 30 millihenrys
G5C11 (C)
What is the inductance of a 20 millihenry inductor in series with a 50 millihenry
inductor?
- A. .07 millihenrys
- B. 14.3 millihenrys
- C. 70 millihenrys
- D. 1000 millihenrys
G5C12 (B)
What is the capacitance of a 20
microfarad capacitor in series with a 50 microfarad capacitor?
- A. .07 microfarads
- B. 14.3
microfarads
- C. 70 microfarads
- D. 1000 microfarads
G5C13 (C)
Which of the following components
should be added to a capacitor to increase the capacitance?
- A. An inductor in series
- B. A resistor in series
- C. A capacitor
in parallel
- D. A capacitor in series
G5C14 (D)
Which of the following components
should be added to an inductor to increase the inductance?
- A. A capacitor in series
- B. A resistor in parallel
- C. An inductor in parallel
- D. An inductor
in series
G5C15 (A)
What is the total resistance of a 10
ohm, a 20 ohm, and a 50 ohm resistor in parallel?
- A. 5.9 ohms
- B. 0.17 ohms
- C. 10000 ohms
- D. 80 ohms
Subelement G6 - Circuit Components
Group
G6A - Resistors; capacitors; inductors
G6A01 (A)
Which of the following is an
important characteristic for capacitors used to filter the DC output of a
switching power supply?
- A. Low
equivalent series resistance
- B. High equivalent series resistance
- C. Low Temperature coefficient
- D. High Temperature coefficient
G6A02 (D)
Which of the following types of
capacitors are often used in power supply circuits to filter the rectified AC?
- A. Disc ceramic
- B. Vacuum variable
- C. Mica
- D. Electrolytic
G6A03 (D)
Which of the following is an
advantage of ceramic capacitors as compared to other types of capacitors?
- A. Tight tolerance
- B. High stability
- C. High capacitance for given volume
- D. Comparatively
low cost
G6A04 (C)
Which of the following is an
advantage of an electrolytic capacitor?
- A. Tight tolerance
- B. Non-polarized
- C. High
capacitance for given volume
- D. Inexpensive RF capacitor
G6A05 (A)
Which of the following is one effect
of lead inductance in a capacitor used at VHF and above?
- A. Effective
capacitance may be reduced
- B. Voltage rating may be reduced
- C. ESR may be reduced
- D. The polarity of the capacitor might become reversed
G6A06 (C)
What will happen to the resistance
if the temperature of a resistor is increased?
- A. It will change depending on the resistor's reactance
coefficient
- B. It will stay the same
- C. It will
change depending on the resistor's temperature coefficient
- D. It will become time dependent
G6A07 (B)
Which of the following is a reason
not to use wire-wound resistors in an RF circuit?
- A. The resistor's tolerance value would not be adequate
for such a circuit
- B. The
resistor's inductance could make circuit performance unpredictable
- C. The resistor could overheat
- D. The resistor's internal capacitance would detune the
circuit
G6A08 (B)
Which of the following describes a thermistor?
- A. A resistor that is resistant to changes in value
with temperature variations
- B. A device
having a specific change in resistance with temperature variations
- C. A special type of transistor for use at very cold
temperatures
- D. A capacitor that changes value with temperature
G6A09 (D)
What is an advantage of using a
ferrite core toroidal inductor?
- A. Large values of inductance may be obtained
- B. The magnetic properties of the core may be optimized
for a specific range of frequencies
- C. Most of the magnetic field is contained in the core
- D. All of these
choices are correct
G6A10 (C)
How should the winding axes of
solenoid inductors be placed to minimize their mutual inductance?
- A. In line
- B. Parallel to each other
- C. At right
angles
- D. Interleaved
G6A11 (B)
Why would it be important to
minimize the mutual inductance between two inductors?
- A. To increase the energy transfer between circuits
- B. To reduce
unwanted coupling between circuits
- C. To reduce conducted emissions
- D. To increase the self-resonant frequency of the
inductors
G6A12 (D)
What is a common name for an
inductor used to help smooth the DC output from the rectifier in a conventional
power supply?
- A. Back EMF choke
- B. Repulsion coil
- C. Charging inductor
- D. Filter choke
G6A13 (B)
What is an effect of inter-turn
capacitance in an inductor?
- A. The magnetic field may become inverted
- B. The inductor
may become self resonant at some frequencies
- C. The permeability will increase
- D. The voltage rating may be exceeded
Group
G6B - Rectifiers; solid state diodes and transistors; vacuum tubes; batteries
G6B01 (C)
What is the peak-inverse-voltage
rating of a rectifier?
- A. The maximum voltage the rectifier will handle in the
conducting direction
- B. 1.4 times the AC frequency
- C. The maximum
voltage the rectifier will handle in the non-conducting direction
- D. 2.8 times the AC frequency
G6B02 (A)
What are two major ratings that must
not be exceeded for silicon diode rectifiers?
- A. Peak inverse
voltage; average forward current
- B. Average power; average voltage
- C. Capacitive reactance; avalanche voltage
- D. Peak load impedance; peak voltage
G6B03 (B)
What is the approximate junction
threshold voltage of a germanium diode?
- A. 0.1 volt
- B. 0.3 volts
- C. 0.7 volts
- D. 1.0 volts
G6B04 (C)
When two or more diodes are
connected in parallel to increase current handling capacity, what is the
purpose of the resistor connected in series with each diode?
- A. To ensure the thermal stability of the power supply
- B. To regulate the power supply output voltage
- C. To ensure
that one diode doesn't carry most of the current
- D. To act as an inductor
G6B05 (C)
What is the approximate junction
threshold voltage of a conventional silicon diode?
- A. 0.1 volt
- B. 0.3 volts
- C. 0.7 volts
- D. 1.0 volts
G6B06 (A)
Which of the following is an advantage
of using a Schottky diode in an RF switching circuit
as compared to a standard silicon diode?
- A. Lower
capacitance
- B. Lower inductance
- C. Longer switching times
- D. Higher breakdown voltage
G6B07 (A)
What are the stable operating points
for a bipolar transistor used as a switch in a logic circuit?
- A. Its
saturation and cut-off regions
- B. Its active region (between the cut-off and
saturation regions)
- C. Its peak and valley current points
- D. Its enhancement and deletion modes
G6B08 (D)
Why must the cases of some large
power transistors be insulated from ground?
- A. To increase the beta of the transistor
- B. To improve the power dissipation capability
- C. To reduce stray capacitance
- D. To avoid
shorting the collector or drain voltage to ground
G6B09 (B)
Which of the following describes the
construction of a MOSFET?
- A. The gate is formed by a back-biased junction
- B. The gate is
separated from the channel with a thin insulating layer
- C. The source is separated from the drain by a thin
insulating layer
- D. The source is formed by depositing metal on silicon
G6B10 (A)
Which element of a triode vacuum
tube is used to regulate the flow of electrons between cathode and plate?
- A. Control grid
- B. Heater
- C. Screen Grid
- D. Trigger electrode
G6B11 (B)
Which of the following solid state
devices is most like a vacuum tube in its general operating characteristics?
- A. A bipolar transistor
- B. A Field
Effect Transistor
- C. A tunnel diode
- D. A varistor
G6B12 (A)
What is the primary purpose of a
screen grid in a vacuum tube?
- A. To reduce
grid-to-plate capacitance
- B. To increase efficiency
- C. To increase the control grid resistance
- D. To decrease plate resistance
G6B13 (B)
What is an advantage of the low
internal resistance of nickel-cadmium batteries?
- A. Long life
- B. High
discharge current
- C. High voltage
- D. Rapid recharge
G6B14 (C)
What is the minimum allowable
discharge voltage for maximum life of a standard 12 volt lead acid battery?
- A. 6 volts
- B. 8.5 volts
- C. 10.5 volts
- D. 12 volts
G6B15 (D)
When is it acceptable to recharge a
carbon-zinc primary cell?
- A. As long as the voltage has not been allowed to drop
below 1.0 volt
- B. When the cell is kept warm during the recharging
period
- C. When a constant current charger is used
- D. Never
Group
G6C - Analog and digital integrated circuits (ICs); microprocessors; memory;
I/O devices; microwave ICs (MMICs ); display devices
G6C01 (D)
Which of the following is an analog
integrated circuit?
- A. NAND Gate
- B. Microprocessor
- C. Frequency Counter
- D. Linear
voltage regulator
G6C02 (B)
What is meant by the term MMIC?
- A. Multi Megabyte Integrated Circuit
- B. Monolithic
Microwave Integrated Circuit
- C. Military-specification Manufactured Integrated
Circuit
- D. Mode Modulated Integrated Circuit
G6C03 (A)
Which of the following is an
advantage of CMOS integrated circuits compared to TTL integrated circuits?
- A. Low power
consumption
- B. High power handling capability
- C. Better suited for RF amplification
- D. Better suited for power supply regulation
G6C04 (B)
What is meant by the term ROM?
- A. Resistor Operated Memory
- B. Read Only
Memory
- C. Random Operational Memory
- D. Resistant to Overload Memory
G6C05 (C)
What is meant when memory is
characterized as "non-volatile"?
- A. It is resistant to radiation damage
- B. It is resistant to high temperatures
- C. The stored
information is maintained even if power is removed
- D. The stored information cannot be changed once
written
G6C06 (D)
Which of the following describes an
integrated circuit operational amplifier?
- A. Digital
- B. MMIC
- C. Programmable Logic
- D. Analog
G6C07 (D)
What is one disadvantage of an
incandescent indicator compared to an LED?
- A. Low power consumption
- B. High speed
- C. Long life
- D. High power
consumption
G6C08 (D)
How is an LED biased when emitting
light?
- A. Beyond cutoff
- B. At the Zener voltage
- C. Reverse Biased
- D. Forward
Biased
G6C09 (A)
Which of the following is a
characteristic of a liquid crystal display?
- A. It requires
ambient or back lighting
- B. It offers a wide dynamic range
- C. It has a wide viewing angle
- D. All of these choices are correct
G6C10 (A)
What two devices in an Amateur Radio
station might be connected using a USB interface?
- A. Computer and
transceiver
- B. Microphone and transceiver
- C. Amplifier and antenna
- D. Power supply and amplifier
G6C11 (B)
What is a microprocessor?
- A. A low power analog signal processor used as a
microwave detector
- B. A computer on
a single integrated circuit
- C. A microwave detector, amplifier, and local
oscillator on a single integrated circuit
- D. A low voltage amplifier used in a microwave
transmitter modulator stage
G6C12 (D)
Which of the following connectors
would be a good choice for a serial data port?
- A. PL-259
- B. Type N
- C. Type SMA
- D. DE-9
G6C13 (C)
Which of these connector types is
commonly used for RF service at frequencies up to 150 MHz?
- A. Octal
- B. RJ-11
- C. PL-259
- D. DB-25
G6C14 (C)
Which of these connector types is
commonly used for audio signals in Amateur Radio stations?
- A. PL-259
- B. BNC
- C. RCA Phono
- D. Type N
G6C15 (B)
What is the main reason to use keyed
connectors instead of non-keyed types?
- A. Prevention of use by unauthorized persons
- B. Reduced
chance of incorrect mating
- C. Higher current carrying capacity
- D. All of these choices are correct
G6C16 (A)
Which of the following describes a
type-N connector?
- A. A
moisture-resistant RF connector useful to 10 GHz
- B. A small bayonet connector used for data circuits
- C. A threaded connector used for hydraulic systems
- D. An audio connector used in surround-sound
installations
G6C17 (C)
What is the general description of a
DIN type connector?
- A. A special connector for microwave interfacing
- B. A DC power connector rated for currents between 30
and 50 amperes
- C. A family of
multiple circuit connectors suitable for audio and control signals
- D. A special watertight connector for use in marine
applications
G6C18 (B)
What is a type SMA connector?
- A. A large bayonet-type connector usable at power
levels in excess of 1 KW
- B. A small
threaded connector suitable for signals up to several GHz
- C. A connector designed for serial multiple access
signals
- D. A type of push-on connector intended for
high-voltage applications
Subelement G7 - Practical Circuits
Group
G7A - Power supplies; schematic symbols
G7A01 (B)
What safety feature does a
power-supply bleeder resistor provide?
- A. It acts as a fuse for excess voltage
- B. It discharges
the filter capacitors
- C. It removes shock hazards from the induction coils
- D. It eliminates ground-loop current
G7A02 (D)
Which of the following components
are used in a power-supply filter network?
- A. Diodes
- B. Transformers and transducers
- C. Quartz crystals
- D. Capacitors
and inductors
G7A03 (D)
What is the peak-inverse-voltage
across the rectifiers in a full-wave bridge power supply?
- A. One-quarter the normal output voltage of the power
supply
- B. Half the normal output voltage of the power supply
- C. Double the normal peak output voltage of the power
supply
- D. Equal to the
normal peak output voltage of the power supply
G7A04 (D)
What is the peak-inverse-voltage
across the rectifier in a half-wave power supply?
- A. One-half the normal peak output voltage of the power
supply
- B. One-half the normal output voltage of the power
supply
- C. Equal to the normal output voltage of the power
supply
- D. Two times the
normal peak output voltage of the power supply
G7A05 (B)
What portion of the AC cycle is
converted to DC by a half-wave rectifier?
- A. 90 degrees
- B. 180 degrees
- C. 270 degrees
- D. 360 degrees
G7A06 (D)
What portion of the AC cycle is
converted to DC by a full-wave rectifier?
- A. 90 degrees
- B. 180 degrees
- C. 270 degrees
- D. 360 degrees
G7A07 (A)
What is the output waveform of an
unfiltered full-wave rectifier connected to a resistive load?
- A. A series of
DC pulses at twice the frequency of the AC input
- B. A series of DC pulses at the same frequency as the
AC input
- C. A sine wave at half the frequency of the AC input
- D. A steady DC voltage
G7A08 (C)
Which of the following is an
advantage of a switch-mode power supply as compared to a linear power supply?
- A. Faster switching time makes higher output voltage
possible
- B. Fewer circuit components are required
- C. High frequency
operation allows the use of smaller components
- D. All of these choices are correct
G7A09 (C)
Which symbol in figure G7-1
represents a field effect transistor?
- A. Symbol 2
- B. Symbol 5
- C. Symbol 1
- D. Symbol 4
G7A10 (D)
Which symbol in figure G7-1 represents
a Zener diode?
- A. Symbol 4
- B. Symbol 1
- C. Symbol 11
- D. Symbol 5
G7A11 (B)
Which symbol in figure G7-1
represents an NPN junction transistor?
- A. Symbol 1
- B. Symbol 2
- C. Symbol 7
- D. Symbol 11
G7A12 (C)
Which symbol in Figure G7-1
represents a multiple-winding transformer?
- A. Symbol 4
- B. Symbol 7
- C. Symbol 6
- D. Symbol 1
G7A13 (A)
Which symbol in Figure G7-1
represents a tapped inductor?
- A. Symbol 7
- B. Symbol 11
- C. Symbol 6
- D. Symbol 1
Group
G7B - Digital circuits; amplifiers and oscillators
G7B01 (A)
Complex digital circuitry can often
be replaced by what type of integrated circuit?
- A.
Microcontroller
- B. Charge-coupled device
- C. Phase detector
- D. Window comparator
G7B02 (A)
Which of the following is an
advantage of using the binary system when processing digital signals?
- A. Binary
"ones" and "zeros" are easy to represent with an
"on" or "off" state
- B. The binary number system is most accurate
- C. Binary numbers are more compatible with analog
circuitry
- D. All of these choices are correct
G7B03 (B)
Which of the following describes the
function of a two input AND gate?
- A. Output is high when either or both inputs are low
- B. Output is
high only when both inputs are high
- C. Output is low when either or both inputs are high
- D. Output is low only when both inputs are high
G7B04 (C)
Which of the following describes the
function of a two input NOR gate?
- A. Output is high when either or both inputs are low
- B. Output is high only when both inputs are high
- C. Output is low
when either or both inputs are high
- D. Output is low only when both inputs are high
G7B05 (C)
How many states does a 3-bit binary
counter have?
G7B06 (A)
What is a shift register?
- A. A clocked
array of circuits that passes data in steps along the array
- B. An array of operational amplifiers used for tri
state arithmetic operations
- C. A digital mixer
- D. An analog mixer
G7B07 (D)
What are the basic components of
virtually all sine wave oscillators?
- A. An amplifier and a divider
- B. A frequency multiplier and a mixer
- C. A circulator and a filter operating in a
feed-forward loop
- D. A filter and
an amplifier operating in a feedback loop
G7B08 (B)
How is the efficiency of an RF power
amplifier determined?
- A. Divide the DC input power by the DC output power
- B. Divide the RF
output power by the DC input power
- C. Multiply the RF input power by the reciprocal of the
RF output power
- D. Add the RF input power to the DC output power
G7B09 (C)
What determines the frequency of an
LC oscillator?
- A. The number of stages in the counter
- B. The number of stages in the divider
- C. The
inductance and capacitance in the tank circuit
- D. The time delay of the lag circuit
G7B10 (D)
Which of the following is a
characteristic of a Class A amplifier?
- A. Low standby power
- B. High Efficiency
- C. No need for bias
- D. Low
distortion
G7B11 (B)
For which of the following modes is
a Class C power stage appropriate for amplifying a modulated signal?
- A. SSB
- B. CW
- C. AM
- D. All of these choices are correct
G7B12 (D)
Which of these classes of amplifiers
has the highest efficiency?
- A. Class A
- B. Class B
- C. Class AB
- D. Class C
G7B13 (B)
What is the reason for neutralizing
the final amplifier stage of a transmitter?
- A. To limit the modulation index
- B. To eliminate
self-oscillations
- C. To cut off the final amplifier during standby
periods
- D. To keep the carrier on frequency
G7B14 (B)
Which of the following describes a
linear amplifier?
- A. Any RF power amplifier used in conjunction with an
amateur transceiver
- B. An amplifier
in which the output preserves the input waveform
- C. A Class C high efficiency amplifier
- D. An amplifier used as a frequency multiplier
Group
G7C - Receivers and transmitters; filters, oscillators
G7C01 (B)
Which of the following is used to
process signals from the balanced modulator and send them to the mixer in a
single-sideband phone transmitter?
- A. Carrier oscillator
- B. Filter
- C. IF amplifier
- D. RF amplifier
G7C02 (D)
Which circuit is used to combine
signals from the carrier oscillator and speech amplifier and send the result to
the filter in a typical single-sideband phone transmitter?
- A. Discriminator
- B. Detector
- C. IF amplifier
- D. Balanced
modulator
G7C03 (C)
What circuit is used to process
signals from the RF amplifier and local oscillator and send the result to the
IF filter in a superheterodyne receiver?
- A. Balanced modulator
- B. IF amplifier
- C. Mixer
- D. Detector
G7C04 (D)
What circuit is used to combine
signals from the IF amplifier and BFO and send the result to the AF amplifier
in a single-sideband receiver?
- A. RF oscillator
- B. IF filter
- C. Balanced modulator
- D. Product
detector
G7C05 (D)
Which of the following is an
advantage of a transceiver controlled by a direct digital synthesizer (DDS)?
- A. Wide tuning range and no need for band switching
- B. Relatively high power output
- C. Relatively low power consumption
- D. Variable
frequency with the stability of a crystal oscillator
G7C06 (B)
What should be the impedance of a
low-pass filter as compared to the impedance of the transmission line into
which it is inserted?
- A. Substantially higher
- B. About the
same
- C. Substantially lower
- D. Twice the transmission line impedance
G7C07 (C)
What is the simplest combination of
stages that implement a superheterodyne receiver?
- A. RF amplifier, detector, audio amplifier
- B. RF amplifier, mixer, IF discriminator
- C. HF oscillator,
mixer, detector
- D. HF oscillator, pre-scaler,
audio amplifier
G7C08 (D)
What type of circuit is used in many
FM receivers to convert signals coming from the IF amplifier to audio?
- A. Product detector
- B. Phase inverter
- C. Mixer
- D. Discriminator
G7C09 (D)
Which of the following is needed for
a Digital Signal Processor IF filter?
- A. An analog to digital converter
- B. A digital to analog converter
- C. A digital processor chip
- D. All of the
these choices are correct
G7C10 (B)
How is Digital Signal Processor filtering
accomplished?
- A. By using direct signal phasing
- B. By converting
the signal from analog to digital and using digital processing
- C. By differential spurious phasing
- D. By converting the signal from digital to analog and
taking the difference of mixing products
G7C11 (A)
What is meant by the term
"software defined radio" (SDR)?
- A. A radio in
which most major signal processing functions are performed by software
- B. A radio which provides computer interface for
automatic logging of band and frequency
- C. A radio which uses crystal filters designed using
software
- D. A computer model which can simulate performance of a
radio to aid in the design process
Subelement G8 - Signals and Emissions
Group
G8A - Carriers and modulation: AM; FM; single and double sideband; modulation
envelope; overmodulation
G8A01 (D)
What is the name of the process that
changes the envelope of an RF wave to carry information?
- A. Phase modulation
- B. Frequency modulation
- C. Spread spectrum modulation
- D. Amplitude
modulation
G8A02 (B)
What is the name of the process that
changes the phase angle of an RF wave to convey information?
- A. Phase convolution
- B. Phase
modulation
- C. Angle convolution
- D. Radian inversion
G8A03 (D)
What is the name of the process
which changes the frequency of an RF wave to convey information?
- A. Frequency convolution
- B. Frequency transformation
- C. Frequency conversion
- D. Frequency
modulation
G8A04 (B)
What emission is produced by a
reactance modulator connected to an RF power amplifier?
- A. Multiplex modulation
- B. Phase
modulation
- C. Amplitude modulation
- D. Pulse modulation
G8A05 (D)
What type of modulation varies the
instantaneous power level of the RF signal?
- A. Frequency shift keying
- B. Pulse position modulation
- C. Frequency modulation
- D. Amplitude
modulation
G8A06 (C)
What is one advantage of carrier
suppression in a single-sideband phone transmission?
- A. Audio fidelity is improved
- B. Greater modulation percentage is obtainable with
lower distortion
- C. The available
transmitter power can be used more effectively
- D. Simpler receiving equipment can be used
G8A07 (A)
Which of the following phone
emissions uses the narrowest frequency bandwidth?
- A. Single
sideband
- B. Double sideband
- C. Phase modulation
- D. Frequency modulation
G8A08 (D)
Which of the following is an effect
of over-modulation?
- A. Insufficient audio
- B. Insufficient bandwidth
- C. Frequency drift
- D. Excessive
bandwidth
G8A09 (B)
What control is typically adjusted
for proper ALC setting on an amateur single sideband transceiver?
- A. The RF clipping level
- B. Transmit
audio or microphone gain
- C. Antenna inductance or capacitance
- D. Attenuator level
G8A10 (C)
What is meant by flat-topping of a
single-sideband phone transmission?
- A. Signal distortion caused by insufficient collector
current
- B. The transmitter's automatic level control is
properly adjusted
- C. Signal
distortion caused by excessive drive
- D. The transmitter's carrier is properly suppressed
G8A11 (A)
What happens to the RF carrier
signal when a modulating audio signal is applied to an FM transmitter?
- A. The carrier
frequency changes proportionally to the instantaneous amplitude of the
modulating signal
- B. The carrier frequency changes proportionally to the
amplitude and frequency of the modulating signal
- C. The carrier amplitude changes proportionally to the instantaneous
frequency of the modulating signal
- D. The carrier phase changes proportionally to the
instantaneous amplitude of the modulating signal
G8A12 (A)
What signal(s) would be found at the
output of a properly adjusted balanced modulator?
- A. Both upper
and lower sidebands
- B. Either upper or lower sideband, but not both
- C. Both upper and lower sidebands and the carrier
- D. The modulating signal and the unmodulated
carrier
Group
G8B - Frequency mixing; multiplication; HF data communications; bandwidths of
various modes; deviation
G8B01 (A)
What receiver stage combines a
14.250 MHz input signal with a 13.795 MHz oscillator signal to produce a 455
kHz intermediate frequency (IF) signal?
- A. Mixer
- B. BFO
- C. VFO
- D. Discriminator
G8B02 (B)
If a receiver mixes a 13.800 MHz VFO
with a 14.255 MHz received signal to produce a 455 kHz intermediate frequency
(IF) signal, what type of interference will a 13.345 MHz signal produce in the
receiver?
- A. Quadrature noise
- B. Image
response
- C. Mixer interference
- D. Intermediate interference
G8B03 (A)
What is another term for the mixing
of two RF signals?
- A. Heterodyning
- B. Synthesizing
- C. Cancellation
- D. Phase inverting
G8B04 (D)
What is the name of the stage in a
VHF FM transmitter that generates a harmonic of a lower frequency signal to
reach the desired operating frequency?
- A. Mixer
- B. Reactance modulator
- C. Pre-emphasis network
- D. Multiplier
G8B05 (C)
Why isn't
frequency modulated (FM) phone used below 29.5 MHz?
- A. The transmitter efficiency for this mode is low
- B. Harmonics could not be attenuated to practical
levels
- C. The wide
bandwidth is prohibited by FCC rules
- D. The frequency stability would not be adequate
G8B06 (D)
What is the total bandwidth of an
FM-phone transmission having a 5 kHzdeviation and a 3
kHz modulating frequency?
- A. 3 kHz
- B. 5 kHz
- C. 8 kHz
- D. 16 kHz
G8B07 (B)
What is the frequency deviation for
a 12.21-MHz reactance-modulated oscillator in a 5-kHz deviation, 146.52-MHz
FM-phone transmitter?
- A. 101.75 Hz
- B. 416.7 Hz
- C. 5 kHz
- D. 60 kHz
G8B08 (B)
Why is it important to know the duty
cycle of the data mode you are using when transmitting?
- A. To aid in tuning your transmitter
- B. Some modes
have high duty cycles which could exceed the transmitter's average power
rating.
- C. To allow time for the other station to break in
during a transmission
- D. All of these choices are correct
G8B09 (D)
Why is it good to match receiver
bandwidth to the bandwidth of the operating mode?
- A. It is required by FCC rules
- B. It minimizes power consumption in the receiver
- C. It improves impedance matching of the antenna
- D. It results in
the best signal to noise ratio
G8B10 (A)
What does the number 31 represent in
PSK31?
- A. The
approximate transmitted symbol rate
- B. The version of the PSK protocol
- C. The year in which PSK31 was invented
- D. The number of characters that can be represented by
PSK31
G8B11 (C)
How does forward error correction
allow the receiver to correct errors in received data packets?
- A. By controlling transmitter output power for optimum
signal strength
- B. By using the varicode
character set
- C. By
transmitting redundant information with the data
- D. By using a parity bit with each character
G8B12 (B)
What is the relationship between
transmitted symbol rate and bandwidth?
- A. Symbol rate and bandwidth are not related
- B. Higher symbol
rates require higher bandwidth
- C. Lower symbol rates require higher bandwidth
- D. Bandwidth is constant for data mode signals
Subelement G9 - Antennas and Feed Lines
Group
G9A - Antenna feed lines: characteristic impedance and attenuation; SWR calculation,
measurement and effects; matching networks
G9A01 (A)
Which of the following factors
determine the characteristic impedance of a parallel conductor antenna feed
line?
- A. The distance
between the centers of the conductors and the radius of the conductors
- B. The distance between the centers of the conductors
and the length of the line
- C. The radius of the conductors and the frequency of
the signal
- D. The frequency of the signal and the length of the
line
G9A02 (B)
What are the typical characteristic impedances
of coaxial cables used for antenna feed lines at amateur stations?
- A. 25 and 30 ohms
- B. 50 and 75
ohms
- C. 80 and 100 ohms
- D. 500 and 750 ohms
G9A03 (D)
What is the characteristic impedance
of flat ribbon TV type twinlead?
- A. 50 ohms
- B. 75 ohms
- C. 100 ohms
- D. 300 ohms
G9A04 (C)
What is the reason for the
occurrence of reflected power at the point where a feed line connects to an
antenna?
- A. Operating an antenna at its resonant frequency
- B. Using more transmitter power than the antenna can
handle
- C. A difference
between feed-line impedance and antenna feed-point impedance
- D. Feeding the antenna with unbalanced feed line
G9A05 (B)
How does the attenuation of coaxial
cable change as the frequency of the signal it is carrying increases?
- A. It is independent of frequency
- B. It increases
- C. It decreases
- D. It reaches a maximum at approximately 18 MHz
G9A06 (D)
In what values are RF feed line
losses usually expressed?
- A. ohms per 1000 ft
- B. dB per 1000 ft
- C. ohms per 100 ft
- D. dB per 100 ft
G9A07 (D)
What must be done to prevent
standing waves on an antenna feed line?
- A. The antenna feed point must be at DC ground
potential
- B. The feed line must be cut to an odd number of
electrical quarter wavelengths long
- C. The feed line must be cut to an even number of physical
half wavelengths long
- D. The antenna
feed-point impedance must be matched to the characteristic impedance of
the feed line
G9A08 (B)
If the SWR on an antenna feed line
is 5 to 1, and a matching network at the transmitter end of the feed line is adjusted
to 1 to 1 SWR, what is the resulting SWR on the feed line?
- A. 1 to 1
- B. 5 to 1
- C. Between 1 to 1 and 5 to 1 depending on the
characteristic impedance of the line
- D. Between 1 to 1 and 5 to 1 depending on the reflected
power at the transmitter
G9A09 (A)
What standing wave ratio will result
from the connection of a 50-ohm feed line to a non-reactive load having a 200-ohm impedance?
- A. 4:1
- B. 1:4
- C. 2:1
- D. 1:2
G9A10 (D)
What standing wave ratio will result
from the connection of a 50-ohm feed line to a non-reactive load having a 10-ohm impedance?
- A. 2:1
- B. 50:1
- C. 1:5
- D. 5:1
G9A11 (B)
What standing wave ratio will result
from the connection of a 50-ohm feed line to a non-reactive load having a 50-ohm impedance?
- A. 2:1
- B. 1:1
- C. 50:50
- D. 0:0
G9A12 (A)
What would be the SWR if you feed a
vertical antenna that has a 25-ohm feed-point impedance with 50-ohm coaxial
cable?
- A. 2:1
- B. 2.5:1
- C. 1.25:1
- D. You cannot determine SWR from impedance values
G9A13 (C)
What would be the SWR if you feed an
antenna that has a 300-ohm feed-point impedance with 50-ohm coaxial cable?
- A. 1.5:1
- B. 3:1
- C. 6:1
- D. You cannot determine SWR from impedance values
Group
G9B - Basic antennas
G9B01 (B)
What is one disadvantage of a
directly fed random-wire antenna?
- A. It must be longer than 1 wavelength
- B. You may
experience RF burns when touching metal objects in your station
- C. It produces only vertically polarized radiation
- D. It is not effective on the higher HF bands
G9B02 (D)
What is an advantage of downward
sloping radials on a quarter wave ground-plane antenna?
- A. They lower the radiation angle
- B. They bring the feed-point impedance closer to 300
ohms
- C. They increase the radiation angle
- D. They bring
the feed-point impedance closer to 50 ohms
G9B03 (B)
What happens to the feed-point
impedance of a ground-plane antenna when its radials are changed from
horizontal to downward-sloping?
- A. It decreases
- B. It increases
- C. It stays the same
- D. It reaches a maximum at an angle of 45 degrees
G9B04 (A)
What is the low angle azimuthal radiation pattern of an ideal half-wavelength
dipole antenna installed 1/2 wavelength high and parallel to the Earth?
- A. It is a
figure-eight at right angles to the antenna
- B. It is a figure-eight off both ends of the antenna
- C. It is a circle (equal radiation in all directions)
- D. It has a pair of lobes on one side of the antenna
and a single lobe on the other side
G9B05 (C)
How does antenna height affect the
horizontal (azimuthal) radiation pattern of a
horizontal dipole HF antenna?
- A. If the antenna is too high, the pattern becomes
unpredictable
- B. Antenna height has no effect on the pattern
- C. If the
antenna is less than 1/2 wavelength high, the azimuthal
pattern is almost omnidirectional
- D. If the antenna is less than 1/2 wavelength high,
radiation off the ends of the wire is eliminated
G9B06 (C)
Where should the
radial wires of a ground-mounted vertical antenna system be placed?
- A. As high as possible above the ground
- B. Parallel to the antenna element
- C. On the
surface or buried a few inches below the ground
- D. At the top of the antenna
G9B07 (B)
How does the feed-point impedance of
a 1/2 wave dipole antenna change as the antenna is lowered from 1/4 wave above
ground?
- A. It steadily increases
- B. It steadily
decreases
- C. It peaks at about 1/8 wavelength above ground
- D. It is unaffected by the height above ground
G9B08 (A)
How does the feed-point impedance of
a 1/2 wave dipole change as the feed-point location is moved from the center
toward the ends?
- A. It steadily
increases
- B. It steadily decreases
- C. It peaks at about 1/8 wavelength from the end
- D. It is unaffected by the location of the feed point
G9B09 (A)
Which of the following is an
advantage of a horizontally polarized as compared to vertically polarized HF
antenna?
- A. Lower ground
reflection losses
- B. Lower feed-point impedance
- C. Shorter Radials
- D. Lower radiation resistance
G9B10 (D)
What is the approximate length for a
1/2-wave dipole antenna cut for 14.250 MHz?
- A. 8 feet
- B. 16 feet
- C. 24 feet
- D. 32 feet
G9B11 (C)
What is the approximate length for a
1/2-wave dipole antenna cut for 3.550 MHz?
- A. 42 feet
- B. 84 feet
- C. 131 feet
- D. 263 feet
G9B12 (A)
What is the approximate length for a
1/4-wave vertical antenna cut for 28.5 MHz?
- A. 8 feet
- B. 11 feet
- C. 16 feet
- D. 21 feet
Group
G9C - Directional antennas
G9C01 (A)
Which of the following would
increase the bandwidth of a Yagi antenna?
- A. Larger
diameter elements
- B. Closer element spacing
- C. Loading coils in series with the element
- D. Tapered-diameter elements
G9C02 (B)
What is the approximate length of
the driven element of a Yagi antenna?
- A. 1/4 wavelength
- B. 1/2
wavelength
- C. 3/4 wavelength
- D. 1 wavelength
G9C03 (B)
Which statement about a
three-element, single-band Yagi antenna is true?
- A. The reflector is normally the shortest parasitic
element
- B. The director
is normally the shortest parasitic element
- C. The driven element is the longest parasitic element
- D. Low feed-point impedance increases bandwidth
G9C04 (A)
Which statement about a
three-element; single-band Yagi antenna is true?
- A. The reflector
is normally the longest parasitic element
- B. The director is normally the longest parasitic
element
- C. The reflector is normally the shortest parasitic
element
- D. All of the elements must be the same length
G9C05 (A)
How does increasing boom length and
adding directors affect a Yagi antenna?
- A. Gain
increases
- B. Beamwidth increases
- C. Weight decreases
- D. Wind load decreases
G9C06 (C)
Which of the following is a reason
why a Yagi antenna is often used for radio
communications on the 20 meter band?
- A. It provides excellent omnidirectional
coverage in the horizontal plane
- B. It is smaller, less expensive and easier to erect
than a dipole or vertical antenna
- C. It helps
reduce interference from other stations to the side or behind the antenna
- D. It provides the highest possible angle of radiation
for the HF bands
G9C07 (C)
What does "front-to-back
ratio" mean in reference to a Yagi antenna?
- A. The number of directors versus the number of
reflectors
- B. The relative position of the driven element with
respect to the reflectors and directors
- C. The power
radiated in the major radiation lobe compared to the power radiated in
exactly the opposite direction
- D. The ratio of forward gain to dipole gain
G9C08 (D)
What is meant by the "main
lobe" of a directive antenna?
- A. The magnitude of the maximum vertical angle of
radiation
- B. The point of maximum current in a radiating antenna
element
- C. The maximum voltage standing wave point on a
radiating element
- D. The direction
of maximum radiated field strength from the antenna
G9C09 (A)
What is the approximate maximum
theoretical forward gain of a three element, single-band Yagi
antenna?
- A. 9.7 dBi
- B. 9.7 dBd
- C. 5.4 times the gain of a dipole
- D. All of these choices are correct
G9C10 (D)
Which of the following is a Yagi antenna design variable that could be adjusted to
optimize forward gain, front-to-back ratio, or SWR bandwidth?
- A. The physical length of the boom
- B. The number of elements on the boom
- C. The spacing of each element along the boom
- D. All of these
choices are correct
G9C11 (A)
What is the purpose of a gamma match
used with Yagi antennas?
- A. To match the
relatively low feed-point impedance to 50 ohms
- B. To match the relatively high feed-point impedance to
50 ohms
- C. To increase the front to back ratio
- D. To increase the main lobe gain
G9C12 (A)
Which of the following is an
advantage of using a gamma match for impedance matching of a Yagi antenna to 50-ohm coax feed line?
- A. It does not
require that the elements be insulated from the boom
- B. It does not require any inductors or capacitors
- C. It is useful for matching multiband antennas
- D. All of these choices are correct
G9C13 (A)
Approximately how long is each side
of a quad antenna driven element?
- A. 1/4
wavelength
- B. 1/2 wavelength
- C. 3/4 wavelength
- D. 1 wavelength
G9C14 (B)
How does the forward gain of a
two-element quad antenna compare to the forward gain of a three-element Yagi antenna?
- A. About 2/3 as much
- B. About the
same
- C. About 1.5 times as much
- D. About twice as much
G9C15 (B)
Approximately how long is each side
of a quad antenna reflector element?
- A. Slightly less than 1/4 wavelength
- B. Slightly more
than 1/4 wavelength
- C. Slightly less than 1/2 wavelength
- D. Slightly more than 1/2 wavelength
G9C16 (D)
How does the gain of a two-element
delta-loop beam compare to the gain of a two-element quad antenna?
- A. 3 dB higher
- B. 3 dB lower
- C. 2.54 dB higher
- D. About the
same
G9C17 (B)
Approximately how long is each leg
of a symmetrical delta-loop antenna?
- A. 1/4 wavelength
- B. 1/3
wavelength
- C. 1/2 wavelength
- D. 2/3 wavelength
G9C18 (A)
What happens when the feed point of
a quad antenna is changed from the center of either horizontal wire to the
center of either vertical wire?
- A. The
polarization of the radiated signal changes from horizontal to vertical
- B. The polarization of the radiated signal changes from
vertical to horizontal
- C. The direction of the main lobe is reversed
- D. The radiated signal changes to an omnidirectional pattern
G9C19 (D)
What configuration of the loops of a
two-element quad antenna must be used for the antenna to operate as a beam
antenna, assuming one of the elements is used as a reflector?
- A. The driven element must be fed with a balun transformer
- B. The driven element must be open-circuited on the
side opposite the feed point
- C. The reflector element must be approximately 5%
shorter than the driven element
- D. The reflector
element must be approximately 5% longer than the driven element
G9C20 (B)
How does the gain of two 3-element
horizontally polarized Yagi antennas spaced
vertically 1/2 wavelength apart typically compare to the gain of a single
3-element Yagi?
- A. Approximately 1.5 dB higher
- B. Approximately
3 dB higher
- C. Approximately 6 dB higher
- D. Approximately 9 dB higher
Group
G9D - Specialized antennas
G9D01 (D)
What does the term "NVIS"
mean as related to antennas?
- A. Nearly Vertical Inductance System
- B. Non-Visible Installation Specification
- C. Non-Varying Impedance Smoothing
- D. Near Vertical
Incidence Sky wave
G9D02 (B)
Which of the following is an
advantage of an NVIS antenna?
- A. Low vertical angle radiation for working stations
out to ranges of several thousand kilometers
- B. High vertical
angle radiation for working stations within a radius of a few hundred
kilometers
- C. High forward gain
- D. All of these choices are correct
G9D03 (D)
At what height above ground is an
NVIS antenna typically installed?
- A. As close to one-half wave as possible
- B. As close to one wavelength as possible
- C. Height is not critical as long as it is
significantly more than 1/2 wavelength
- D. Between 1/10
and 1/4 wavelength
G9D04 (A)
What is the primary purpose of
antenna traps?
- A. To permit
multiband operation
- B. To notch spurious frequencies
- C. To provide balanced feed-point impedance
- D. To prevent out of band operation
G9D05 (D)
What is the advantage of vertical
stacking of horizontally polarized Yagi antennas?
- A. Allows quick selection of vertical or horizontal
polarization
- B. Allows simultaneous vertical and horizontal
polarization
- C. Narrows the main lobe in azimuth
- D. Narrows the
main lobe in elevation
G9D06 (A)
Which of the following is an
advantage of a log periodic antenna?
- A. Wide
bandwidth
- B. Higher gain per element than a Yagi
antenna
- C. Harmonic suppression
- D. Polarization diversity
G9D07 (A)
Which of the following describes a
log periodic antenna?
- A. Length and
spacing of the elements increases logarithmically from one end of the boom
to the other
- B. Impedance varies periodically as a function of
frequency
- C. Gain varies logarithmically as a function of
frequency
- D. SWR varies periodically as a function of boom length
G9D08 (B)
Why is a Beverage antenna not used
for transmitting?
- A. Its impedance is too low for effective matching
- B. It has high
losses compared to other types of antennas
- C. It has poor directivity
- D. All of these choices are correct
G9D09 (B)
Which of the following is an
application for a Beverage antenna?
- A. Directional transmitting for low HF bands
- B. Directional
receiving for low HF bands
- C. Portable direction finding at higher HF frequencies
- D. Portable direction finding at lower HF frequencies
G9D10 (D)
Which of the following describes a
Beverage antenna?
- A. A vertical antenna constructed from beverage cans
- B. A broad-band mobile antenna
- C. A helical antenna for space reception
- D. A very long
and low directional receiving antenna
G9D11 (D)
Which of the following is a
disadvantage of multiband antennas?
- A. They present low impedance on all design frequencies
- B. They must be used with an antenna tuner
- C. They must be fed with open wire line
- D. They have
poor harmonic rejection
Subelement G0 - Electrical and RF Safety
Group
G0A - RF safety principles, rules and guidelines; routine station evaluation
G0A01 (A)
What is one way that RF energy can
affect human body tissue?
- A. It heats body
tissue
- B. It causes radiation poisoning
- C. It causes the blood count to reach a dangerously low
level
- D. It cools body tissue
G0A02 (D)
Which of the following properties is
important in estimating whether an RF signal exceeds the maximum permissible
exposure (MPE)?
- A. Its duty cycle
- B. Its frequency
- C. Its power density
- D. All of these
choices are correct
G0A03 (D)
How can you determine that your
station complies with FCC RF exposure regulations?
- A. By calculation based on FCC OET Bulletin 65
- B. By calculation based on computer modeling
- C. By measurement of field strength using calibrated
equipment
- D. All of these
choices are correct
G0A04 (D)
What does "time averaging"
mean in reference to RF radiation exposure?
- A. The average time of day when the exposure occurs
- B. The average time it takes RF radiation to have any long-term
effect on the body
- C. The total time of the exposure
- D. The total RF
exposure averaged over a certain time
G0A05 (A)
What must you do if an evaluation of
your station shows RF energy radiated from your station exceeds permissible
limits?
- A. Take action
to prevent human exposure to the excessive RF fields
- B. File an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS-97) with
the FCC
- C. Secure written permission from your neighbors to
operate above the controlled MPE limits
- D. All of these choices are correct
G0A07 (A)
What effect does transmitter duty
cycle have when evaluating RF exposure?
- A. A lower
transmitter duty cycle permits greater short-term exposure levels
- B. A higher transmitter duty cycle permits greater
short-term exposure levels
- C. Low duty cycle transmitters are exempt from RF
exposure evaluation requirements
- D. High duty cycle transmitters are exempt from RF
exposure requirements
G0A08 (C)
Which of the following steps must an
amateur operator take to ensure compliance with RF safety regulations when transmitter
power exceeds levels specified in part 97.13?
- A. Post a copy of FCC Part 97 in the station
- B. Post a copy of OET Bulletin 65 in the station
- C. Perform a
routine RF exposure evaluation
- D. All of these choices are correct
G0A09 (B)
What type of instrument can be used
to accurately measure an RF field?
- A. A receiver with an S meter
- B. A calibrated
field-strength meter with a calibrated antenna
- C. A betascope with a dummy
antenna calibrated at 50 ohms
- D. An oscilloscope with a high-stability crystal marker
generator
G0A10 (D)
What is one thing that can be done
if evaluation shows that a neighbor might receive more than the allowable limit
of RF exposure from the main lobe of a directional antenna?
- A. Change from horizontal polarization to vertical polarization
- B. Change from horizontal polarization to circular
polarization
- C. Use an antenna with a higher front-to-back ratio
- D. Take
precautions to ensure that the antenna cannot be pointed in their
direction
G0A11 (C)
What precaution should you take if you
install an indoor transmitting antenna?
- A. Locate the antenna close to your operating position
to minimize feed-line radiation
- B. Position the antenna along the edge of a wall to
reduce parasitic radiation
- C. Make sure
that MPE limits are not exceeded in occupied areas
- D. No special precautions are necessary if SSB and CW
are the only modes used
G0A12 (B)
What precaution should you take
whenever you make adjustments or repairs to an antenna?
- A. Ensure that you and the antenna structure are
grounded
- B. Turn off the
transmitter and disconnect the feed line
- C. Wear a radiation badge
- D. All of these choices are correct
G0A13 (D)
What precaution should be taken when
installing a ground-mounted antenna?
- A. It should not be installed higher than you can reach
- B. It should not be installed in a wet area
- C. It should limited to 10 feet in height
- D. It should be
installed so no one can be exposed to RF radiation in excess of maximum
permissible limits
Group
G0B - Safety in the ham shack: electrical shock and treatment, safety
grounding, fusing, interlocks, wiring, antenna and tower safety
G0B01 (A)
Which wire or wires in a
four-conductor line cord should be attached to fuses or circuit breakers in a
device operated from a 240-VAC single-phase source?
- A. Only the hot
wires
- B. Only the neutral wire
- C. Only the ground wire
- D. All wires
G0B02 (C)
What is the minimum wire size that
may be safely used for a circuit that draws up to 20 amperes of continuous
current?
- A. AWG number 20
- B. AWG number 16
- C. AWG number 12
- D. AWG number 8
G0B03 (D)
Which size of fuse or circuit
breaker would be appropriate to use with a circuit that uses AWG number 14
wiring?
- A. 100 amperes
- B. 60 amperes
- C. 30 amperes
- D. 15 amperes
G0B04 (A)
Which of the following is a primary
reason for not placing a gasoline-fueled generator inside an occupied area?
- A. Danger of
carbon monoxide poisoning
- B. Danger of engine over torque
- C. Lack of oxygen for adequate combustion
- D. Lack of nitrogen for adequate combustion
G0B05 (B)
Which of the following conditions will
cause a Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter (GFCI) to disconnect the 120 or 240
Volt AC line power to a device?
- A. Current flowing from one or more of the hot wires to
the neutral wire
- B. Current
flowing from one or more of the hot wires directly to ground
- C. Over-voltage on the hot wire
- D. All of these choices are correct
G0B06 (D)
Why must the metal enclosure of
every item of station equipment be grounded?
- A. It prevents blowing of fuses in case of an internal
short circuit
- B. It prevents signal overload
- C. It ensures that the neutral wire is grounded
- D. It ensures
that hazardous voltages cannot appear on the chassis
G0B07 (B)
Which of the following should be
observed for safety when climbing on a tower using a safety belt or harness?
- A. Never lean back and rely on the belt alone to
support your weight
- B. Always attach
the belt safety hook to the belt D-ring with the hook opening away from
the tower
- C. Ensure that all heavy tools are securely fastened to
the belt D-ring
- D. Make sure that your belt is grounded at all times
G0B08 (B)
What should be done by any person
preparing to climb a tower that supports electrically powered devices?
- A. Notify the electric company that a person will be
working on the tower
- B. Make sure all
circuits that supply power to the tower are locked out and tagged
- C. Unground the base of the
tower
- D. All of these choices are correct
G0B09 (D)
Why should soldered joints not be
used with the wires that connect the base of a tower to a system of ground
rods?
- A. The resistance of solder is too high
- B. Solder flux will prevent a low conductivity
connection
- C. Solder has too high a dielectric constant to provide
adequate lightning protection
- D. A soldered
joint will likely be destroyed by the heat of a lightning strike
G0B10 (A)
Which of the following is a danger
from lead-tin solder?
- A. Lead can
contaminate food if hands are not washed carefully after handling
- B. High voltages can cause lead-tin solder to
disintegrate suddenly
- C. Tin in the solder can "cold flow" causing
shorts in the circuit
- D. RF energy can convert the lead into a poisonous gas
G0B11 (D)
Which of the following is good
engineering practice for lightning protection grounds?
- A. They must be bonded to all buried water and gas
lines
- B. Bends in ground wires must be made as close as
possible to a right angle
- C. Lightning grounds must be connected to all
ungrounded wiring
- D. They must be
bonded together with all other grounds
G0B12 (C)
What is the purpose of a transmitter
power supply interlock?
- A. To prevent unauthorized access to a transmitter
- B. To guarantee that you cannot accidentally transmit
out of band
- C. To ensure
that dangerous voltages are removed if the cabinet is opened
- D. To shut off the transmitter if too much current is
drawn
G0B13 (A)
What must you do when powering your
house from an emergency generator?
- A. Disconnect
the incoming utility power feed
- B. Insure that the generator is not grounded
- C. Insure that all lightning grounds are disconnected
- D. All of these choices are correct
G0B14 (C)
Which of the following is covered by
the National Electrical Code?
- A. Acceptable bandwidth limits
- B. Acceptable modulation limits
- C. Electrical
safety inside the ham shack
- D. RF exposure limits of the human body
G0B15 (A)
Which of the following is true of an
emergency generator installation?
- A. The generator
should be located in a well ventilated area
- B. The generator should be insulated from ground
- C. Fuel should be stored near the generator for rapid
refueling in case of an emergency
- D. All of these choices are correct
G0B16 (C)
When might a lead acid storage
battery give off explosive hydrogen gas?
- A. When stored for long periods of time
- B. When being discharged
- C. When being
charged
- D. When not placed on a level surface