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Louisiana CDL DMV Endorsement Hazmat 2

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Number of Test
10
Number of Question
30
Passing score
24
13%
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  • 0Incorrect
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1. Shippers package in order to ____ hazardous materials.
Contain
Release
Insulate

Shippers package hazardous materials in a way that is meant to completely contain the materials. Vehicles should be placarded to communicate the risk of the cargo.

2. When loading compressed gas, the liquid discharge valves should be:
Closed.
Greased.
Opened.

Keep liquid discharge valves on a compressed gas tank closed except when loading and unloading.

3. If you identify hazardous materials leaking while you are driving, you should:
Continue driving to find a phone booth and call the National Response Center.
Park the vehicle.
Leave the area to find help.

If you discover that a cargo of hazardous materials is leaking from your vehicle, you should park the vehicle as soon as possible. The longer you continue driving, the longer the trail of contamination becomes. While this creates potential danger and harm to others, it also increases clean-up expenses.

4. If you're transporting explosives and your vehicle breaks down, you should notify other drivers:
With flares.
With reflective triangles.
By standing on the roadway and waving your arms.

If your vehicle breaks down while you are transporting explosives and you need to use warning signals, use reflective triangles or red electric lights. Never use burning signals, such as flares or fuses, when transporting explosives.

5. If a package contains liquid containers, the box must display:
Arrows pointing in the correct upright direction.
A return address.
The number of containers inside the box.

Packages that contain liquid containers must have orientation markers. Arrows displayed on the box should be pointing in the correct upright direction.

6. Hazardous materials may be transported:
By any driver with a CDL.
By a driver with a CDL and hazardous materials endorsement.
In rural areas by any driver.

You must have a CDL with a hazardous materials endorsement to operate a vehicle of any size that is used to transport hazardous materials.

7. The power unit of a placarded vehicle must carry a fire extinguisher with a minimum rating of:
10 B:C.
30 B:C.
40 B:C.

The power unit of a placarded vehicle must be equipped with a fire extinguisher with an Underwriters Laboratories (UL) rating of 10 B:C or more.

8. If a shipping paper describes both hazardous and non-hazardous materials:
The hazardous materials must be listed first.
The hazardous materials must be written larger.
The hazardous materials must be listed in red ink.

If a shipping paper lists both hazardous and non-hazardous materials, the hazardous materials must be entered first.

9. What does a shipping paper describe?
The materials being transported
How the materials will be transported
Who should accept the materials being transported

Among other information, shipping papers must include a description of the specific hazardous materials being transported.

10. When loading containers of hazardous materials, you should not use:
Dollies.
Hooks.
Straps.

Always protect containers of hazardous materials. When loading hazardous materials, never use equipment that could damage containers or packaging, such as hooks.

11. As a driver, which of the following is not your job at the scene of an accident?
Keeping people away from the scene.
Taking heroic measures to put the fire out.
Communicating the danger of the hazardous materials to response personnel.

If you are involved in an accident while carrying hazardous materials, it is your responsibility as the driver to keep people away from the scene; limit the spread of material if you can safely do so; inform emergency response personnel of the dangers posed by the materials; and provide emergency personnel with the shipping papers and emergency response information. Unless you have protective equipment and the necessary training, do not try to fight hazardous materials fires yourself.

12. When you are behind the steering wheel, shipping papers should be:
Within reach.
In the sleeping compartment.
Hidden under the seat.

When transporting hazardous materials, shipping papers should be kept in a pouch in the driver's side door, or in another location where the driver is able to easily reach them while their seat belt is fastened. The papers must be easily visible to anyone who is entering the cab.

13. The only way to effectively check your tire pressure is:
With a tire pressure gauge.
By eyeballing it.
By pushing on the tire to feel the pressure.

You must examine each tire on a motor vehicle at the beginning of each trip. The only effective way to check tire pressure is by using a tire pressure gauge.

14. A person should not smoke within ____ of a vehicle placarded for Class 3 or Division 2.1 materials.
50 feet
25 feet
100 feet

You should not smoke within 25 feet of a placarded cargo tank used to transport materials that are categorized as Class 3 (flammable liquids) or Division 2.1 (gases). Do not smoke or carry a lit cigar, pipe, or cigarette near a vehicle containing flammable or explosive materials.

15. Hazardous materials shipping papers may not be kept:
In a pouch on the driver’s door.
In a pouch on the passenger’s side door.
Within reach of the driver while the seat belt is fastened.

Shipping papers must be quickly accessible in the event of an emergency. While driving, operators must keep the papers in a pouch on the driver’s door or in clear view and within immediate reach while their seat belt is fastened. Shipping papers may be kept on the driver’s seat when the driver is out of the vehicle.

16. When carrying Division 1.1, 1.2, or 1.3 explosives, your vehicle should not be:
Parked within 300 feet of a bridge.
Parked within 40 feet of the road.
Driven in rain or snow.

Except when parking briefly to perform necessary functions for vehicle operation (such as refueling), never park a vehicle carrying Division 1.1, 1.2, or 1.3 explosives within 300 feet of a bridge, tunnel, or building. Never park such a vehicle within five feet of the traveled portion of the road.

17. You can find the identification numbers assigned to hazardous chemicals:
In the DOT Emergency Response Guide.
In the truck's driver’s manual.
On the company's website.

The U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT)'s Emergency Response Guide provides information about hazardous materials, indexed by proper shipping names and hazardous materials identification numbers.

18. A placard indicating hazardous materials is shaped like a:
Diamond.
Triangle.
Circle.

Hazardous materials warning placards are diamond-shaped.

19. If transporting chlorine, what must be in the vehicle?
A gas mask
Goggles
An axe

If transporting chlorine in cargo tanks, a driver must have an approved gas mask in their vehicle.

20. If loading corrosive materials, you should not:
Roll the containers.
Load the containers by hand.
Use the vehicle’s parking brake.

If loading by hand, load breakable containers of corrosive liquid one by one. Keep them facing upright. Do not drop or roll the containers.

21. A driver should ensure that:
The shipping paper matches the markings and labels on packages.
The shipping paper is written in code.
All packages are labeled as poison.

It is always a good idea to compare package markings and labels to accompanying shipping papers. Always make sure the shipper has displayed the correct basic description on the shipping paper and has provided the proper labels on the packages.

22. When traveling with Division 1.1 explosives, you may park no closer than ____ from the nearest building.
10 feet
50 feet
300 feet

When carrying Division 1.1, 1.2, or 1.3 explosives, you should not park within 300 feet of a bridge, tunnel, or building, unless you are parking for a short period of time while performing an operational necessity, like refueling.

23. If you are transporting hazardous materials and the cargo is on fire, you should:
Try to put it out with a fire extinguisher.
Contact emergency personnel and let them battle the fire.
Hope the fire goes out by itself.

Fighting a hazardous materials fire requires special training and protective gear. Unless you have the proper equipment and training, do not try to fight a hazardous materials fire yourself.

24. If transporting explosives:
You must have a written route plan.
You should take the shortest possible route.
You can always use tunnels.

If transporting Division 1.1, 1.2, or 1.3 explosives, you must follow a written route plan. Whenever placarded, avoid heavily populated areas, crowds, tunnels, narrow streets, and alleys. Be sure to research any restrictions that may apply to the routes you plan to take.

25. If you discover that your cargo is leaking, you should:
Touch the leaking material to identify the cargo.
Use shipping papers and labels to identify the leaking cargo.
Assume all the cargo is leaking.

If you discover a leak in a cargo of hazardous materials, identify the materials in question by using the shipping papers, labels, or package location. Do not touch the leaking material.

26. When Division 1.3 materials are being transported, the floor liner should be:
Made from non-ferrous materials.
Metallic.
Attached loosely.

You should use a floor lining when transporting Division 1.1, 1.2, or 1.3 materials. The floors must be tight and the liner must be made from either non-metallic material or non-ferrous metal. Non-ferrous metals are any metals that do not contain iron or iron alloys.

27. If a package of hazardous materials is not large enough to hold a label, it should be labeled:
With a barcode.
With a tag.
By being placed in a certain part of the trailer.

If a hazardous materials label will not fit onto a package, it may be placed on a tag that is securely attached to the package.

28. A shipping paper:
Is not needed for most shipments of hazardous materials.
Is required for all shipments of hazardous materials.
Can be kept in a digital file.

Shippers of hazardous materials are required to provide proper shipping papers to communicate the risks of the materials.

29. Who must label hazardous materials?
The shipper
The loader
The driver

The shipper of hazardous materials is responsible for packaging, marking, and labeling the materials. They must supply the warning placards.

30. Class 1, Class 2.1, and Class 3 materials should not be placed in a trailer with:
A heater.
An air conditioner.
Other items.

The use of cargo heaters is not always permitted. When transporting materials that are categorized as Class 1 (Explosives), Class 2.1 (Flammable Gases), or Class 3 (Flammable Liquids), the use of heaters in the same space is generally prohibited.

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