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Washington CDL DMV Endorsement Hazmat 1

Take 10 practice tests for CDL is the best way to prepare for your Washington DMV exam is by taking our free practice tests. The following question are from real Washington DMV practice test. More than 95% people pass a DMV exam when practice at DMV Practice Test.

Number of Test
10
Number of Question
30
Passing score
24
13%
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  • 0Incorrect
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1. When trying to control a minor truck fire, what should you do before opening trailer doors?
Check to see if the doors are hot.
Throw water on the doors.
Remove your protective equipment.

If you are experiencing a truck fire, you should not attempt to open trailer doors without first feeling the doors to see if they are hot. If the doors are hot, there may be a cargo fire. Leave the doors closed if there is a cargo fire.

2. Placards showing the type of hazardous materials in a vehicle are usually which shape?
A tall rectangle
A triangle
A diamond

In general, vehicles carrying hazardous materials are required to display diamond-shaped warning signs on all four sides. These warning signs are called "placards."

3. 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.

4. A material’s hazard class reflects:
The risks associated with the material.
How quickly the material must reach its destination.
How much the material weighs.

A hazardous material will be placed into one of nine classes to explain the type of risks associated with the material.

5. If you notice a cargo leak, you should identify the leaking hazardous materials by:
Smelling the materials.
Touching the materials.
Using the shipping papers.

If you discover a cargo leak while transporting hazardous materials, use the shipping papers, label, or package location to identify which materials are involved. Do not try to touch or smell the leaking materials to determine what they are because doing so could result in injury or death.

6. Many products classed as poison are also:
Radioactive.
Flammable.
Gases.

Many hazardous materials classified as poisonous are also flammable.

7. A hazardous material's identification number should appear:
On the transporting vehicle's bumper.
On the material's packaging.
On a sticker near the material's shipping container.

A material's ID number must appear on its accompanying shipping paper as well as on its packaging. It also must appear on cargo tanks and other bulk packaging.

8. 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.

9. Load hazardous materials:
Near heat sources.
Away from heat sources.
Away from shadows.

Always load hazardous materials away from heat sources. Be aware of regulations on explosive or flammable materials that prohibit them from being loaded in cargo spaces with heaters.

10. A person attending a placarded vehicle must be:
Inside a gas station looking through a window.
In the vehicle, awake or asleep.
Within 100 feet of the vehicle.

A person attending a placarded vehicle must be awake inside the vehicle or otherwise within 100 feet of the vehicle; know the hazards associated with the materials; know what to do in an emergency; and be able and authorized to move the tank if necessary.

11. 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.

12. During a cargo fire, opening the trailer doors may actually cause the fire to expand because doing so:
Allows oxygen into the trailer.
Changes the temperature of the trailer.
Provides more moisture to the trailer.

When experiencing a cargo fire, it may be a bad idea to open the doors to the trailer. Doing so allows oxygen to enter the area, potentially causing the fire to flare up and expand.

13. 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.

14. How often are hazardous materials employees required to be trained and tested?
Once every year
Once every three years
Once every five years

All drivers must be trained in the security risks of hazardous materials transportation. This training must include how to recognize and respond to possible security threats. Hazardous materials employees must be trained and tested at least once every three years.

15. If a driver is given a leaking package or shipment, they should:
Accept it.
Refuse it.
Leave it on the side of the road.

It is a driver's responsibility to refuse packages or shipments of hazardous materials if they contain leaks.

16. If a shipping paper describes both hazardous and non-hazardous materials, the hazardous materials may need to be:
Highlighted in a contrasting color.
Circled by a pen or marker.
Unmarked.

If a shipping paper describes both hazardous and non-hazardous materials, the hazardous materials must be distinguished in one of three ways. They must be entered first on the shipping paper, highlighted in a contrasting color, or properly marked with an "X" in a column titled "HM."

17. If your engine runs a pump used during delivery of compressed gas, you should turn off the engine:
While unhooking the hoses.
After unhooking the hoses.
Before unhooking the hoses.

Unless your engine runs a pump for product transfer, turn it off when loading or unloading a compressed gas tank. If you do use your engine to run a pump, you should turn the engine off after the product transfer but before unhooking the hoses.

18. Hazardous materials placards are usually shaped like:
Circles.
Triangles.
Diamonds.

Hazardous materials warning placards are usually diamond-shaped.

19. If transporting a package that contains radioactive materials, it is important to know that:
Radiation surrounds the package and will pass through to other packages.
The package should be transported in the cab.
The package should be loaded on their side.

Radiation will surround each package of radioactive materials and pass through to all nearby packages. The number of packages that can be loaded together is controlled.

20. 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.

21. To know which placard to use, you need to know:
The hazard class of the materials.
The type of container that is holding the materials.
The destination of the materials.

To determine which placards need to be used, you must know the hazard class of the materials being shipped, the amount of hazardous materials being shipped, and the total weight of all hazardous materials in your vehicle.

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

Hazardous materials warning placards are diamond-shaped.

23. 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.

24. Containers of hazardous materials must be:
Brightly-colored.
Braced to prevent movement during transportation.
Made of cardboard.

Containers of hazardous materials should be braced so they will not fall, slide, or bounce around during transportation.

25. If "Inhalation Hazard" appears on a shipping paper, the shipper should provide which placard?
Liquid
Poison Gas or Poison Inhalation Hazard
Reportable Quantity

If the words "Inhalation Hazard" appear on the shipping paper or package, you must display the "Poison Inhalation Hazard" or "Poison Gas" placards, as appropriate.

26. A clue that your shipment contains hazardous materials is that:
The shipper is in the business of firework or munition dealing.
The last shipment you picked up was labeled as hazardous.
The packaging looks damaged.

One clue that a shipment may contain hazardous materials is that the shipper is in a line of business that involves such materials. Examples include paint dealers; chemical suppliers; scientific supply houses; pest control businesses; agricultural supply firms; and dealers in explosives, munitions, or fireworks.

27. 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.

28. 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.

29. When loading compressed gas, the liquid discharge valves should be:
Closed.
Removed.
Opened.

On a compressed gas tank, liquid discharge valves must always be kept closed, except during loading and unloading.

30. In addition to reading the manual, the best way to learn about transporting hazardous materials is to:
Talk to other HazMat drivers.
Attend hazardous materials training courses.
Follow your instincts.

While the manual includes all of the information required to pass the hazardous materials knowledge test, you should consider reading the manual as only the first step to learning about the topic. You can learn more by reading and understanding the federal and state rules about the transportation of hazardous materials, as well as by attending hazardous materials training courses.

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