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- 4AA-1.1 What are the frequency privileges authorized to the
- Advanced operator in the 75-meter wavelength band?
- A. 3525 kHz to 3750 kHz and 3775 kHz to 4000 kHz
- B. 3500 kHz to 3525 kHz and 3800 kHz to 4000 kHz
- C. 3500 kHz to 3525 kHz and 3800 kHz to 3890 kHz
- D. 3525 kHz to 3775 kHz and 3800 kHz to 4000 kHz
-
- 4AA-1.2 What are the frequency privileges authorized to the
- Advanced operator in the 40-meter wavelength band?
- A. 7000 kHz to 7300 kHz
- B. 7025 kHz to 7300 kHz
- C. 7025 kHz to 7350 kHz
- D. 7000 kHz to 7025 kHz
-
- 4AA-1.3 What are the frequency privileges authorized to the
- Advanced operator in the 20-meter wavelength band?
- A. 14000 kHz to 14150 kHz and 14175 kHz to 14350 kHz
- B. 14025 kHz to 14175 kHz and 14200 kHz to 14350 kHz
- C. 14000 kHz to 14025 kHz and 14200 kHz to 14350 kHz
- D. 14025 kHz to 14150 kHz and 14175 kHz to 14350 kHz
-
- 4AA-1.4 What are the frequency privileges authorized to the
- Advanced operator in the 15-meter wavelength band?
- A. 21000 kHz to 21200 kHz and 21250 kHz to 21450 kHz
- B. 21000 kHz to 21200 kHz and 21300 kHz to 21450 kHz
- C. 21025 kHz to 21200 kHz and 21225 kHz to 21450 kHz
- D. 21025 kHz to 21250 kHz and 21270 kHz to 21450 kHz
-
- 4AA-2.1 What is meant by automatic retransmission from a repeater
- station?
- A. The repeater is actuated by a received electrical signal
- B. The repeater is actuated by a telephone control link
- C. The repeater station is actuated by a control operator
- D. The repeater station is actuated by a call sign sent in
- Morse code
-
- 4AA-2.2 What is the term for the operation of a repeater whereby
- the repeater station is actuated solely by the presence of a
- received signal through electrical or electromechanical means,
- without any direct, positive action by the control operator?
- A. Simplex retransmission
- B. Manual retransmission
- C. Linear retransmission
- D. Automatic retransmission
-
- 4AA-2.3 Under what circumstances, if any, may an amateur station
- automatically retransmit programs or the radio signals of other
- amateur stations?
- A. Only when the station licensee is present
- B. Only if the station is a repeater or space station
- C. Only when the control operator is present
- D. Only during portable operation
-
- 4AA-2.4 Which of the following stations may not be automatically
- controlled?
- A. A station transmitting control signals to a model craft
- B. A station in beacon operation
- C. A station in auxiliary operation
- D. A station in repeater operation
-
- 4AA-3.1 What is meant by repeater operation?
- A. An amateur radio station employing a phone patch to pass
- third-party communications
- B. An apparatus for effecting remote control between a control
- point and a remotely controlled station
- C. Manual or simplex operation
- D. Radio communications in which amateur radio station signals
- are automatically retransmitted
-
- 4AA-3.2 What is a closed repeater?
- A. A repeater containing control circuitry that limits
- repeater access to certain users
- B. A repeater containing no special control circuitry to limit
- access to any licensed amateur
- C. A repeater containing a transmitter and receiver on the
- same frequency, a closed pair
- D. A repeater shut down by order of an FCC District Engineer-
- in-Charge
-
- 4AA-3.3 What frequencies in the 10-meter wavelength band are
- available for repeater operation?
- A. 28.0-28.7 MHz
- B. 29.0-29.7 MHz
- C. 29.5-29.7 MHz
- D. 28.5-29.7 MHz
-
- 4AA-3.4 Which of the following repeater operating and technical
- parameters are ++++not++++ the responsibility of the area frequency
- coordinator?
- A. The repeater effective radiated power
- B. The repeater transmit and receive frequencies
- C. The repeater Height Above Average Terrain (HAAT)
- D. The repeater call sign
-
- 4AA-3.5 What frequencies in the 23-cm wavelength band are
- available for repeater operation?
- A. 1270-1300 MHz
- B. 1270-1295 MHz
- C. 1240-1300 MHz
- D. Repeater operation is not permitted in the 23-cm wavelength
- band
-
- 4AA-3.6 What is an open repeater?
- A. A repeater that does not contain control circuitry that
- limits repeater access to certain users
- B. A repeater available for use only by members of a club or
- repeater group
- C. A repeater that continuously transmits a signal to indicate
- that it is available for use
- D. A repeater whose frequency pair has been properly
- coordinated
-
- 4AA-3.7 What frequencies in the 6-meter wavelength band are
- available for repeater operation?
- A. 51.00-52.00 MHz
- B. 50.25-52.00 MHz
- C. 52.00-53.00 MHz
- D. 51.00-54.00 MHz
-
- 4AA-3.8 What frequencies in the 2-meter wavelength band are
- available for repeater operation?
- A. 144.50-145.50 and 146-148.00 MHz
- B. 144.50-148.00 MHz
- C. 144.75-146.00 and 146-148.00 MHz
- D. 146.00-148.00 MHz
-
- 4AA-3.9 What frequencies in the 1.25-meter wavelength band are
- available for repeater operation?
- A. 220.25-225.00 MHz
- B. 220.50-225.00 MHz
- C. 221.00-225.00 MHz
- D. 223.00-225.00 MHz
-
- 4AA-3.10 What frequencies in the 0.70-meter wavelength band are
- available for repeater operation?
- A. 420.0-431, 433-435 and 438-450 MHz
- B. 420.5-440 and 445-450 MHz
- C. 420.5-435 and 438-450 MHz
- D. 420.5-433, 435-438 and 439-450 MHz
-
- 4AA-4.1 What is meant by auxiliary station operation?
- A. Radio communication from a location more than 50 miles from
- that indicated on the station license for a period of more than
- three months
- B. Remote control of model airplanes or boats using
- frequencies above 50.1 MHz
- C. Remote control of model airplanes or boats using
- frequencies above 29.5 MHz
- D. Transmission of communications point-to-point within a
- system of cooperating amateur stations
-
- 4AA-4.2 What is one use for a station in auxiliary operation?
- A. Point-to-point radio communications within a system of
- cooperating amateur stations
- B. Remote control of model craft
- C. Passing of international third-party communications
- D. The retransmission of NOAA weather broadcasts
-
- 4AA-4.3 A station in auxiliary operation may only communicate
- with which stations?
- A. Stations in the public safety service
- B. Other amateur stations within a system of cooperating
- amateur stations
- C. Amateur radio stations in space satellite operation
- D. Amateur radio stations other than those under manual
- control
-
- 4AA-4.4 What frequencies are authorized for stations in auxiliary
- operation?
- A. All amateur frequency bands above 220.5 MHz, except 432-433
- MHz and 436-438 MHz
- B. All amateur frequency bands above 220.5 MHz, except 431-432
- MHz and 435-437 MHz
- C. All amateur frequency bands above 220.5 MHz, except 431-433
- MHz and 435-438 MHz
- D. All amateur frequency bands above 220.5 MHz, except 430-432
- MHz and 434-437 MHz
-
- 4AA-5.1 What is meant by ++++remote control++++ of an amateur radio
- station?
- A. Amateur communications conducted from a specific
- geographical location other than that shown on the station
- license
- B. Automatic operation of a station from a control point
- located elsewhere than at the station transmitter
- C. An amateur radio station operating under automatic control
- D. A control operator indirectly manipulating the operating
- adjustments in the station through a control link
-
- 4AA-5.2 What is one responsibility of a control operator of a
- station under remote control?
- A. Provisions must be made to limit transmissions to no more
- than 3 minutes if the control link malfunctions
- B. Provisions must be made to limit transmissions to no more
- than 4 minutes if the control link malfunctions
- C. Provisions must be made to limit transmissions to no more
- than 5 minutes if the control link malfunctions
- D. Provisions must be made to limit transmissions to no more
- than 10 minutes if the control link malfunctions
-
- 4AA-5.3 If the control link for a station under remote control
- malfunctions, there must be a provision to limit transmission to
- what time length?
- A. 5 seconds
- B. 10 minutes
- C. 3 minutes
- D. 5 minutes
-
- 4AA-5.4 What frequencies are authorized for radio remote control
- of an amateur radio station?
- A. All amateur frequency bands above 220.5 MHz, except 432-433
- MHz and 436-438 MHz
- B. All amateur frequency bands above 220.5 MHz, except 431-432
- MHz and 435-437 MHz
- C. All amateur frequency bands above 220.5 MHz, except 431-433
- MHz and 435-438 MHz
- D. All amateur frequency bands above 220.5 MHz, except 430-432
- MHz and 434-437 MHz
-
- 4AA-5.5 What frequencies are authorized for radio remote control
- of a station in repeater operation?
- A. All amateur frequency bands above 220.5 MHz, except 432-433
- MHz and 436-438 MHz
- B. All amateur frequency bands above 220.5 MHz, except 431-432
- MHz and 435-437 MHz
- C. All amateur frequency bands above 220.5 MHz, except 430-432
- MHz and 434-437 MHz
- D. All amateur frequency bands above 220.5 MHz, except 431-433
- MHz and 435-438 MHz
-
- 4AA-6.1 What is meant by ++++automatic control++++ of an amateur radio
- station?
- A. The use of devices and procedures for control so that a
- control operator does not have to be present at a control point
- B. Radio communication for remotely controlling another
- amateur radio station
- C. Remotely controlling a station such that a control operator
- does not have to be present at the control point at all times
- D. The use of a control link between a control point and a
- remotely controlled station
-
- 4AA-6.2 How do the responsibilities of the control operator of a
- station under automatic control differ from one under local
- control?
- A. Under local control, there is no control operator
- B. Under automatic control, a control operator is not required
- to be present at a control point
- C. Under automatic control, there is no control operator
- D. Under local control, a control operator is not required to
- be present at the control point at all times
-
- 4AA-6.3 Which of the following amateur stations may be operated
- by automatic control?
- A. Stations without a control operator
- B. Stations in repeater operation
- C. Stations under remote control
- D. Stations controlling model craft
-
- 4AA-7.1 What is a control link?
- A. The automatic-control devices at an unattended station
- B. An automatically operated link
- C. The remote control apparatus between a control point and a
- remotely controlled station
- D. A transmission-limiting timing device
-
- 4AA-7.2 What is the term for apparatus to effect remote control
- between the control point and a remotely controlled station?
- A. Tone link
- B. Wire control
- C. Remote control
- D. Control link
-
- 4AA-8.1 What is meant by local control?
- A. The use of a control operator who directly manipulates the
- operating adjustments
- B. The OSCAR satellite transponder
- C. A carrier operated relay system
- D. The use of a portable handheld to turn on or off the
- repeater
-
- 4AA-8.2 Who may be the control operator of an auxiliary station?
- A. Any amateur operator
- B. Any Technician, General, Advanced or Amateur Extra class
- operator
- C. Any General, Advanced or Amateur Extra class operator
- D. Any Advanced or Amateur Extra class operator
-
- 4AA-9.1 How may a repeater station be identified?
- A. By a burst of digitized information
- B. Only voice may be used for identification
- C. By CW or voice
- D. Only CW may be used for identification
-
- 4AA-9.2 When a repeater station is identified in Morse code using
- an automatic keying device, what is the maximum code speed
- permitted?
- A. 13 words per minute
- B. 30 words per minute
- C. 20 words per minute
- D. There is no limitation
-
- 4AA-9.3 How often must a beacon station be identified?
- A. Every eight minutes
- B. Only at the end of the series of transmissions
- C. At the beginning of a series of transmissions
- D. At least once every ten minutes during and at the end of
- activity
-
- 4AA-9.4 When may a repeater be identified using digital codes?
- A. Any time that particular code is used for at least part of
- the communication
- B. Digital identification is not allowed
- C. Only voice may be allowed
- D. No identification is needed in digital transmissions
-
- 4AA-10.1 When is prior FCC approval required before constructing
- or altering an amateur station antenna structure?
- A. When the antenna structure violates local building codes
- B. When the height above ground will exceed 200 feet
- C. When an antenna located 23000 feet from an airport runway
- will be 150 feet high
- D. When an antenna located 23000 feet from an airport runway
- will be 100 feet high
-
- 4AA-10.2 What must an amateur radio operator obtain from the FCC
- before constructing or altering an antenna structure more than
- 200 feet high?
- A. An Environmental Impact Statement
- B. A Special Temporary Authorization
- C. Prior approval
- D. An effective radiated power statement
-
- 4AA-11.1 Without special FCC approval, what maximum height above
- ground level (excluding airport proximity effects) is permitted
- for any amateur antenna support structure, including the
- radiating elements, tower, supports, etc.?
- A. 46 m (150 feet)
- B. 61 m (200 feet)
- C. 76 m (250 feet)
- D. 91 m (300 feet)
-
- 4AA-11.2 From what government agencies must permission be
- obtained if you wish to erect an amateur antenna structure that
- exceeds 200 feet above ground level?
- A. Federal Aviation Administration and Federal Communications
- Commission
- B. Environmental Protection Agency and Federal Communications
- Commission
- C. Federal Aviation Administration and Environmental
- Protection Agency
- D. Environmental Protection Agency and National Aeronautics
- and Space Administration
-
- 4AA-12.1 Which of the following types of amateur communications
- is ++++not++++ a "prohibited transmission" as defined in Part 97?
- A. Transmission of messages into a disaster area for hire or
- for material compensation
- B. Transmissions ensuring safety on a highway, such as calling
- a commercial tow truck service
- C. Transmission of communications that facilitate the regular
- business or commercial affairs of any party
- D. Transmission of communications concerning moving, supplying
- and quartering participants in a charity event as long as the
- sponsoring charity is the principal beneficiary of such
- communications, not the public
-
- 4AA-12.2 May an amateur operator inform other amateur operators
- of the availability of apparatus for sale or trade over the
- airwaves?
- A. You are not allowed to sell or trade equipment on the air
- B. You are allowed to derive a profit by buying or selling
- equipment on the air on a regular basis
- C. This is a permissible activity if the apparatus can
- normally be used at an amateur station and is not done for profit
- by the offering individual on a regular basis
- D. This is allowed only if you also give the serial number of
- the equipment
-
- 4AA-12.3 Under what conditions, if any, may communications be
- transmitted to a commercial business by an amateur station?
- A. When the total remuneration does not exceed 25
- B. When the control operator is employed by the FCC
- C. When transmitting international third-party communications
- D. When the immediate safety of human life or immediate
- protection of property is involved
-
- 4AA-13.1 What are the only types of messages that may be
- transmitted to an amateur station in a foreign country?
- A. Supplies needed, on a routine schedule
- B. Emergency messages or business messages
- C. Business messages or messages of a technical nature
- D. Personal remarks, tests, or messages of a technical nature
-
- 4AA-13.2 What are the limitations on international amateur radio
- communications regarding the types of messages transmitted?
- A. Emergency communications only
- B. Technical or personal messages only
- C. Business communications only
- D. Call sign and signal reports only
-
- 4AA-14.1 Under what circumstances, if any, may amateur operators
- accept payment for using their own stations (other than a club
- station) to send messages?
- A. When employed by the FCC
- B. When passing emergency traffic
- C. Under no circumstances
- D. When passing international third-party communications
-
- 4AA-14.2 Under what circumstances, if any, may the licensee of an
- amateur station in repeater operation accept remuneration for
- providing communication services to another party?
- A. When the repeater is operating under portable power
- B. When the repeater is under local control
- C. During Red Cross or other emergency service drills
- D. Under no circumstances
-
- 4AA-15.1 Who is responsible for preparing an Element 1(A)
- telegraphy examination?
- A. The volunteer examiners or a qualified supplier
- B. The FCC
- C. The VEC
- D. Any Novice licensee
-
- 4AA-15.2 What must the Element 1(A) telegraphy examination prove?
- A. The applicant's ability to send and receive text in
- international Morse code at a rate of not less than 13 words per
- minute
- B. The applicant's ability to send and receive text in
- international Morse code at a rate of not less than 5 words per
- minute
- C. The applicant's ability to send and receive text in
- international Morse code at a rate of not less than 20 words per
- minute
- D. The applicant's ability to send text in international Morse
- code at a rate of not less than 13 words per minute
-
- 4AA-15.3 Which telegraphy characters are used in an Element 1(A)
- telegraphy examination?
- A. The letters A through Z, 0/ through 9, the period, the
- comma, the question mark, AR, SK, BT and DN
- B. The letters A through Z, 0/ through 9, the period, the
- comma, the open and closed parenthesis, the question mark, AR,
- SK, BT and DN
- C. The letters A through Z, 0/ through 9, the period, the
- comma, the dollar sign, the question mark, AR, SK, BT and DN
- D. A through Z, 0/ through 9, the period, the comma, and the
- question mark
-
- 4AA-16.1 Who is responsible for preparing an Element 2 written
- examination?
- A. The FCC
- B. Any Novice licensee
- C. The volunteer examiners or a qualified supplier
- D. The VEC
-
- 4AA-16.2 Where do volunteer examiners obtain the questions for
- preparing an Element 2 written examination?
- A. They must prepare the examination from material contained
- in the ++++ARRL Handbook++++ or obtain a question set from the FCC
- B. They must prepare the examination from material contained
- in a question pool maintained by the FCC in Washington
- C. They must prepare the examination from material contained
- in a question pool maintained by the local FCC field office
- D. They must prepare the examination from a common question
- pool maintained by the VECs or obtain a question set from a
- supplier
-
- 4AA-17.1 Who is eligible for administering an examination for the
- Novice operator license?
- A. An amateur radio operator holding a General, Advanced or
- Extra class license and at least 18 years old
- B. An amateur radio operator holding a Technician, General,
- Advanced or Extra class license and at least 18 years old
- C. An amateur radio operator holding a General, Advanced or
- Extra class license and at least 16 years old
- D. An amateur radio operator holding a Technician, General,
- Advanced or Extra class license and at least 16 years old
-
- 4AA-17.2 Within how many days after the administration of a
- successful Novice examination must the examiners submit the
- application to the FCC?
- A. Within one week of the administration date
- B. Within 10 days of the administration date
- C. Within 5 days of the administration date
- D. Within 30 days of the administration date
-
- 4AA-17.3 Where must the completed Form 610 be submitted after the
- administration of a successful Novice examination?
- A. To the nearest FCC Field Office
- B. To the FCC in Washington, DC
- C. To the FCC in Gettysburg, PA
- D. To any VEC
-
- 4AA-18.1 What is the minimum passing score on a written
- examination element for the Novice operator license?
- A. A minimum of 19 correct answers
- B. A minimum of 22 correct answers
- C. A minimum of 21 correct answers
- D. A minimum of 24 correct answers
-
- 4AA-18.2 How many questions must an Element 2 written examination
- contain?
- A. 25
- B. 50
- C. 40
- D. 30
-
- 4AA-18.3 In a telegraphy examination, how many characters are
- counted as one word?
- A. 2
- B. 5
- C. 8
- D. 10
-
- 4AA-19.1 What is the minimum age to be a volunteer examiner?
- A. 16 years old
- B. 21 years old
- C. 18 years old
- D. 13 years old
-
- 4AA-19.2 Under what circumstances, if any, may volunteer
- examiners be compensated for their services?
- A. Under no circumstances
- B. When out-of-pocket expenses exceed 25
- C. The volunteer examiner may be compensated when traveling
- over 25 miles to the test site
- D. Only when there are more than 20 applicants attending the
- examination session
-
- 4AA-19.3 Under what circumstances, if any, may a person whose
- amateur station license or amateur operator license has ever been
- revoked or suspended be a volunteer examiner?
- A. Under no circumstances
- B. Only if five or more years have elapsed since the
- revocation or suspension
- C. Only if 3 or more years have elapsed since the revocation
- or suspension
- D. Only after review and subsequent approval by the VEC
-
- 4AA-19.4 Under what circumstances, if any, may an employee of a
- company which is engaged in the distribution of equipment used in
- connection with amateur radio transmissions be a volunteer
- examiner?
- A. If the employee is employed in the amateur radio sales part
- of the company
- B. If the employee does not normally communicate with the
- manufacturing or distribution part of the company
- C. If the employee serves as a volunteer examiner for his/her
- customers
- D. If the employee does not normally communicate with the
- benefits and policies part of the company
-
- 4AA-20.1 What are the penalties for fraudulently administering
- examinations?
- A. The VE's amateur station license may be suspended for a
- period not to exceed 3 months
- B. The VE is subject to a monetary fine not to exceed 500 for
- each day the offense was committed
- C. The VE's amateur station license may be revoked and the
- operator's license suspended
- D. The VE may be restricted to administering only Novice class
- license examinations
-
- 4AA-20.2 What are the penalties for administering examinations
- for money or other considerations?
- A. The VE's amateur station license may be suspended for a
- period not to exceed 3 months
- B. The VE is subject to a monetary fine not to exceed 500 for
- each day the offense was committed
- C. The VE will be restricted to administering only Novice
- class license examinations
- D. The VE's amateur station license may be revoked and the
- operator's license suspended
-
- 4AB-1.1 What is ++++facsimile++++?
- A. The transmission of characters by radioteletype that form a
- picture when printed
- B. The transmission of still pictures by slow-scan television
- C. The transmission of video by amateur television
- D. The transmission of printed pictures for permanent display
- on paper
-
- 4AB-1.2 What is the modern standard scan rate for a facsimile
- picture transmitted by an amateur station?
- A. The modern standard is 240 lines per minute
- B. The modern standard is 50 lines per minute
- C. The modern standard is 150 lines per second
- D. The modern standard is 60 lines per second
-
- 4AB-1.3 What is the approximate transmission time for a facsimile
- picture transmitted by an amateur station?
- A. Approximately 6 minutes per frame at 240 lpm
- B. Approximately 3.3 minutes per frame at 240 lpm
- C. Approximately 6 seconds per frame at 240 lpm
- D. 1/60 second per frame at 240 lpm
-
- 4AB-1.4 What is the term for the transmission of printed pictures
- by radio?
- A. Television
- B. Facsimile
- C. Xerography
- D. ACSSB
-
- 4AB-1.5 In facsimile, how are variations in picture brightness
- and darkness converted into voltage variations?
- A. With an LED
- B. With a Hall-effect transistor
- C. With a photodetector
- D. With an optoisolator
-
- 4AB-2.1 What is ++++slow-scan++++ television?
- A. The transmission of Baudot or ASCII signals by radio
- B. The transmission of pictures for permanent display on paper
- C. The transmission of moving pictures by radio
- D. The transmission of still pictures by radio
-
- 4AB-2.2 What is the scan rate commonly used for amateur slow-scan
- television?
- A. 20 lines per minute
- B. 15 lines per second
- C. 4 lines per minute
- D. 240 lines per minute
-
- 4AB-2.3 How many lines are there in each frame of an amateur
- slow-scan television picture?
- A. 30
- B. 60
- C. 120
- D. 180
-
- 4AB-2.4 What is the audio frequency for black in an amateur slow-
- scan television picture?
- A. 2300 Hz
- B. 2000 Hz
- C. 1500 Hz
- D. 120 Hz
-
- 4AB-2.5 What is the audio frequency for white in an amateur slow-
- scan television picture?
- A. 120 Hz
- B. 1500 Hz
- C. 2000 Hz
- D. 2300 Hz
-
- 4AC-1.1 What is a ++++sporadic-E++++ condition?
- A. Variations in E-layer height caused by sunspot variations
- B. A brief increase in VHF signal levels from meteor trails at
- E-layer height
- C. Patches of dense ionization at E-layer height
- D. Partial tropospheric ducting at E-layer height
-
- 4AC-1.2 What is the propagation condition called where scattered
- patches of relatively dense ionization develop seasonally at E
- layer heights?
- A. Auroral propagation
- B. Ducting
- C. Scatter
- D. Sporadic-E
-
- 4AC-1.3 In what region of the world is ++++sporadic-E++++ most prevalent?
- A. The equatorial regions
- B. The arctic regions
- C. The northern hemisphere
- D. The polar regions
-
- 4AC-1.4 On which amateur frequency band is the extended-distance
- propagation effect of sporadic-E most often observed?
- A. 2 meters
- B. 6 meters
- C. 20 meters
- D. 160 meters
-
- 4AC-1.5 What appears to be the major cause of the ++++sporadic-E++++
- condition?
- A. Wind shear
- B. Sunspots
- C. Temperature inversions
- D. Meteors
-
- 4AC-2.1 What is a ++++selective fading++++ effect?
- A. A fading effect caused by small changes in beam heading at
- the receiving station
- B. A fading effect caused by phase differences between radio
- wave components of the same transmission, as experienced at the
- receiving station
- C. A fading effect caused by large changes in the height of
- the ionosphere, as experienced at the receiving station
- D. A fading effect caused by time differences between the
- receiving and transmitting stations
-
- 4AC-2.2 What is the propagation effect called when phase
- differences between radio wave components of the same
- transmission are experienced at the recovery station?
- A. Faraday rotation
- B. Diversity reception
- C. Selective fading
- D. Phase shift
-
- 4AC-2.3 What is the major cause of ++++selective fading++++?
- A. Small changes in beam heading at the receiving station
- B. Large changes in the height of the ionosphere, as
- experienced at the receiving station
- C. Time differences between the receiving and transmitting
- stations
- D. Phase differences between radio wave components of the same
- transmission, as experienced at the receiving station
-
- 4AC-2.4 Which emission modes suffer the most from ++++selective
- fading++++?
- A. CW and SSB
- B. FM and double sideband AM
- C. SSB and AMTOR
- D. SSTV and CW
-
- 4AC-2.5 How does the bandwidth of the transmitted signal affect
- ++++selective fading++++?
- A. It is more pronounced at wide bandwidths
- B. It is more pronounced at narrow bandwidths
- C. It is equally pronounced at both narrow and wide bandwidths
- D. The receiver bandwidth determines the selective fading
- effect
-
- 4AC-3.1 What effect does ++++auroral activity++++ have upon radio
- communications?
- A. The readability of SSB signals increases
- B. FM communications are clearer
- C. CW signals have a clearer tone
- D. CW signals have a fluttery tone
-
- 4AC-3.2 What is the cause of ++++auroral activity++++?
- A. A high sunspot level
- B. A low sunspot level
- C. The emission of charged particles from the sun
- D. Meteor showers concentrated in the northern latitudes
-
- 4AC-3.3 In the northern hemisphere, in which direction should a
- directional antenna be pointed to take maximum advantage of
- auroral propagation?
- A. South
- B. North
- C. East
- D. West
-
- 4AC-3.4 Where in the ionosphere does auroral activity occur?
- A. At F-layer height
- B. In the equatorial band
- C. At D-layer height
- D. At E-layer height
-
- 4AC-3.5 Which emission modes are best for auroral propagation?
- A. CW and SSB
- B. SSB and FM
- C. FM and CW
- D. RTTY and AM
-
- 4AC-4.1 Why does the radio-path horizon distance exceed the
- geometric horizon?
- A. E-layer skip
- B. D-layer skip
- C. Auroral skip
- D. Radio waves may be bent
-
- 4AC-4.2 How much farther does the radio-path horizon distance
- exceed the geometric horizon?
- A. By approximately 15% of the distance
- B. By approximately twice the distance
- C. By approximately one-half the distance
- D. By approximately four times the distance
-
- 4AC-4.3 To what distance is VHF propagation ordinarily limited?
- A. Approximately 1000 miles
- B. Approximately 500 miles
- C. Approximately 1500 miles
- D. Approximately 2000 miles
-
- 4AC-4.4 What propagation condition is usually indicated when a
- VHF signal is received from a station over 500 miles away?
- A. D-layer absorption
- B. Faraday rotation
- C. Tropospheric ducting
- D. Moonbounce
-
- 4AC-4.5 What happens to a radio wave as it travels in space and
- collides with other particles?
- A. Kinetic energy is given up by the radio wave
- B. Kinetic energy is gained by the radio wave
- C. Aurora is created
- D. Nothing happens since radio waves have no physical
- substance
-
- 4AD-1.1 What is a ++++frequency standard++++?
- A. A net frequency
- B. A device used to produce a highly accurate reference
- frequency
- C. A device for accurately measuring frequency to within 1 Hz
- D. A device used to generate wideband random frequencies
-
- 4AD-1.2 What is a ++++frequency-marker generator++++?
- A. A device used to produce a highly accurate reference
- frequency
- B. A sweep generator
- C. A broadband white noise generator
- D. A device used to generate wideband random frequencies
-
- 4AD-1.3 How is a frequency-marker generator used?
- A. In conjunction with a grid-dip meter
- B. To provide reference points on a receiver dial
- C. As the basic frequency element of a transmitter
- D. To directly measure wavelength
-
- 4AD-1.4 What is a ++++frequency counter++++?
- A. A frequency measuring device
- B. A frequency marker generator
- C. A device that determines whether or not a given frequency
- is in use before automatic transmissions are made
- D. A broadband white noise generator
-
- 4AD-1.5 How is a frequency counter used?
- A. To provide reference points on an analog receiver dial
- B. To generate a frequency standard
- C. To measure the deviation in an FM transmitter
- D. To measure frequency
-
- 4AD-1.6 What is the most the actual transmitter frequency could
- differ from a reading of 146,520,000-Hertz on a frequency counter
- with a time base accuracy of +/- 1.0 ppm?
- A. 165.2 Hz
- B. 14.652 kHz
- C. 146.52 Hz
- D. 1.4652 MHz
-
- 4AD-1.7 What is the most the actual transmitter frequency could
- differ from a reading of 146,520,000-Hertz on a frequency counter
- with a time base accuracy of +/- 0.1 ppm?
- A. 14.652 Hz
- B. 0.1 MHz
- C. 1.4652 Hz
- D. 1.4652 kHz
-
- 4AD-1.8 What is the most the actual transmitter frequency could
- differ from a reading of 146,520,000-Hertz on a frequency counter
- with a time base accuracy of +/- 10 ppm?
- A. 146.52 Hz
- B. 10 Hz
- C. 146.52 kHz
- D. 1465.20 Hz
-
- 4AD-1.9 What is the most the actual transmitter frequency could
- differ from a reading of 432,100,000-Hertz on a frequency counter
- with a time base accuracy of +/- 1.0 ppm?
- A. 43.21 MHz
- B. 10 Hz
- C. 1.0 MHz
- D. 432.1 Hz
-
- 4AD-1.10 What is the most the actual transmit frequency could
- differ from a reading of 432,100,000-Hertz on a frequency counter
- with a time base accuracy of +/- 0.1 ppm?
- A. 43.21 Hz
- B. 0.1 MHz
- C. 432.1 Hz
- D. 0.2 MHz
-
- 4AD-1.11 What is the most the actual transmit frequency could
- differ from a reading of 432,100,000-Hertz on a frequency counter
- with a time base accuracy of +/- 10 ppm?
- A. 10 MHz
- B. 10 Hz
- C. 4321 Hz
- D. 432.1 Hz
-
- 4AD-2.1 What is a ++++dip-meter++++?
- A. A field strength meter
- B. An SWR meter
- C. A variable LC oscillator with metered feedback current
- D. A marker generator
-
- 4AD-2.2 Why is a dip-meter used by many amateur operators?
- A. It can measure signal strength accurately
- B. It can measure frequency accurately
- C. It can measure transmitter output power accurately
- D. It can give an indication of the resonant frequency of a
- circuit
-
- 4AD-2.3 How does a dip-meter function?
- A. Reflected waves at a specific frequency desensitize the
- detector coil
- B. Power coupled from an oscillator causes a decrease in
- metered current
- C. Power from a transmitter cancels feedback current
- D. Harmonics of the oscillator cause an increase in resonant
- circuit Q
-
- 4AD-2.4 What two ways could a dip-meter be used in an amateur
- station?
- A. To measure resonant frequency of antenna traps and to
- measure percentage of modulation
- B. To measure antenna resonance and to measure percentage of
- modulation
- C. To measure antenna resonance and to measure antenna
- impedance
- D. To measure resonant frequency of antenna traps and to
- measure a tuned circuit resonant frequency
-
- 4AD-2.5 What types of coupling occur between a dip-meter and a
- tuned circuit being checked?
- A. Resistive and inductive
- B. Inductive and capacitive
- C. Resistive and capacitive
- D. Strong field
-
- 4AD-2.6 How tight should the dip-meter be coupled with the tuned
- circuit being checked?
- A. As loosely as possible, for best accuracy
- B. As tightly as possible, for best accuracy
- C. First loose, then tight, for best accuracy
- D. With a soldered jumper wire between the meter and the
- circuit to be checked, for best accuracy
-
- 4AD-2.7 What happens in a dip-meter when it is too tightly
- coupled with the tuned circuit being checked?
- A. Harmonics are generated
- B. A less accurate reading results
- C. Cross modulation occurs
- D. Intermodulation distortion occurs
-
- 4AD-3.1 What factors limit the accuracy, frequency response, and
- stability of an oscilloscope?
- A. Sweep oscillator quality and deflection amplifier bandwidth
- B. Tube face voltage increments and deflection amplifier
- voltage
- C. Sweep oscillator quality and tube face voltage increments
- D. Deflection amplifier output impedance and tube face
- frequency increments
-
- 4AD-3.2 What factors limit the accuracy, frequency response, and
- stability of a D'Arsonval movement type meter?
- A. Calibration, coil impedance and meter size
- B. Calibration, series resistance and electromagnet current
- C. Coil impedance, electromagnet voltage and movement mass
- D. Calibration, mechanical tolerance and coil impedance
-
- 4AD-3.3 What factors limit the accuracy, frequency response, and
- stability of a frequency counter?
- A. Number of digits in the readout, speed of the logic and
- time base stability
- B. Time base accuracy, speed of the logic and time base
- stability
- C. Time base accuracy, temperature coefficient of the logic
- and time base stability
- D. Number of digits in the readout, external frequency
- reference and temperature coefficient of the logic
-
- 4AD-3.4 How can the frequency response of an oscilloscope be
- improved?
- A. By using a triggered sweep and a crystal oscillator as the
- time base
- B. By using a crystal oscillator as the time base and
- increasing the vertical sweep rate
- C. By increasing the vertical sweep rate and the horizontal
- amplifier frequency response
- D. By increasing the horizontal sweep rate and the vertical
- amplifier frequency response
-
- 4AD-3.5 How can the accuracy of a frequency counter be improved?
- A. By using slower digital logic
- B. By improving the accuracy of the frequency response
- C. By increasing the accuracy of the time base
- D. By using faster digital logic
-
- 4AD-4.1 What is the condition called which occurs when the
- signals of two transmitters in close proximity mix together in
- one or both of their final amplifiers, and unwanted signals at
- the sum and difference frequencies of the original transmissions
- are generated?
- A. Amplifier desensitization
- B. Neutralization
- C. Adjacent channel interference
- D. Intermodulation interference
-
- 4AD-4.2 How does ++++intermodulation interference++++ between two
- transmitters usually occur?
- A. When the signals from the transmitters are reflected out of
- phase from airplanes passing overhead
- B. When they are in close proximity and the signals mix in one
- or both of their final amplifiers
- C. When they are in close proximity and the signals cause
- feedback in one or both of their final amplifiers
- D. When the signals from the transmitters are reflected in
- phase from airplanes passing overhead
-
- 4AD-4.3 How can intermodulation interference between two
- transmitters in close proximity often be reduced or eliminated?
- A. By using a Class C final amplifier with high driving power
- B. By installing a terminated circulator or ferrite isolator
- in the feed line to the transmitter and duplexer
- C. By installing a band-pass filter in the antenna feed line
- D. By installing a low-pass filter in the antenna feed
- line
-
- 4AD-4.4 What can occur when a non-linear amplifier is used with a
- single-sideband phone transmitter?
- A. Reduced amplifier efficiency
- B. Increased intelligibility
- C. Sideband inversion
- D. Distortion
-
- 4AD-4.5 How can even-order harmonics be reduced or prevented in
- transmitter amplifier design?
- A. By using a push-push amplifier
- B. By using a push-pull amplifier
- C. By operating class C
- D. By operating class AB
-
- 4AD-5.1 What is ++++receiver desensitizing++++?
- A. A burst of noise when the squelch is set too low
- B. A burst of noise when the squelch is set too high
- C. A reduction in receiver sensitivity because of a strong
- signal on a nearby frequency
- D. A reduction in receiver sensitivity when the AF gain
- control is turned down
-
- 4AD-5.2 What is the term used to refer to the reduction of
- receiver gain caused by the signals of a nearby station
- transmitting in the same frequency band?
- A. Desensitizing
- B. Quieting
- C. Cross modulation interference
- D. Squelch gain rollback
-
- 4AD-5.3 What is the term used to refer to a reduction in receiver
- sensitivity caused by unwanted high-level adjacent channel
- signals?
- A. Intermodulation distortion
- B. Quieting
- C. Desensitizing
- D. Overloading
-
- 4AD-5.4 What causes ++++receiver desensitizing++++?
- A. Audio gain adjusted too low
- B. Squelch gain adjusted too high
- C. The presence of a strong signal on a nearby frequency
- D. Squelch gain adjusted too low
-
- 4AD-5.5 How can ++++receiver desensitizing++++ be reduced?
- A. Ensure good RF shielding between the transmitter and
- receiver
- B. Increase the transmitter audio gain
- C. Decrease the receiver squelch gain
- D. Increase the receiver bandwidth
-
- 4AD-6.1 What is ++++cross-modulation interference++++?
- A. Interference between two transmitters of different
- modulation type
- B. Interference caused by audio rectification in the receiver
- preamp
- C. Harmonic distortion of the transmitted signal
- D. Modulation from an unwanted signal is heard in addition to
- the desired signal
-
- 4AD-6.2 What is the term used to refer to the condition where the
- signals from a very strong station are superimposed on other
- signals being received?
- A. Intermodulation distortion
- B. Cross-modulation interference
- C. Receiver quieting
- D. Capture effect
-
- 4AD-6.3 How can ++++cross-modulation++++ in a receiver be reduced?
- A. By installing a filter at the receiver
- B. By using a better antenna
- C. By increasing the receiver's RF gain while decreasing the
- AF gain
- D. By adjusting the pass-band tuning
-
- 4AD-6.4 What is the result of ++++cross-modulation++++?
- A. A decrease in modulation level of transmitted signals
- B. Receiver quieting
- C. The modulation of an unwanted signal is heard on the
- desired signal
- D. Inverted sidebands in the final stage of the amplifier
-
- 4AD-7.1 What is the ++++capture effect++++?
- A. All signals on a frequency are demodulated by an FM
- receiver
- B. All signals on a frequency are demodulated by an AM
- receiver
- C. The loudest signal received is the only demodulated signal
- D. The weakest signal received is the only demodulated signal
-
- 4AD-7.2 What is the term used to refer to the reception blockage
- of one FM-phone signal by another FM-phone signal?
- A. Desensitization
- B. Cross-modulation interference
- C. Capture effect
- D. Frequency discrimination
-
- 4AD-7.3 With which emission type is the capture-effect most
- pronounced?
- A. FM
- B. SSB
- C. AM
- D. CW
-
- 4AE-1.1 What is ++++reactive power++++?
- A. Wattless, non-productive power
- B. Power consumed in wire resistance in an inductor
- C. Power lost because of capacitor leakage
- D. Power consumed in circuit Q
-
- 4AE-1.2 What is the term for an out-of-phase, non-productive
- power associated with inductors and capacitors?
- A. Effective power
- B. True power
- C. Peak envelope power
- D. Reactive power
-
- 4AE-1.3 What is the term for energy that is stored in an
- electromagnetic or electrostatic field?
- A. Potential energy
- B. Amperes-joules
- C. Joules-coulombs
- D. Kinetic energy
-
- 4AE-1.4 What is responsible for the phenomenon when voltages
- across reactances in series can often be larger than the voltages
- applied to them?
- A. Capacitance
- B. Resonance
- C. Conductance
- D. Resistance
-
- 4AE-2.1 What is ++++resonance++++ in an electrical circuit?
- A. The highest frequency that will pass current
- B. The lowest frequency that will pass current
- C. The frequency at which capacitive reactance equals
- inductive reactance
- D. The frequency at which power factor is at a minimum
-
- 4AE-2.2 Under what conditions does resonance occur in an
- electrical circuit?
- A. When the power factor is at a minimum
- B. When inductive and capacitive reactances are equal
- C. When the square root of the sum of the capacitive and
- inductive reactances is equal to the resonant frequency
- D. When the square root of the product of the capacitive and
- inductive reactances is equal to the resonant frequency
-
- 4AE-2.3 What is the term for the phenomena which occurs in an
- electrical circuit when the inductive reactance equals the
- capacitive reactance?
- A. Reactive quiescence
- B. High Q
- C. Reactive equilibrium
- D. Resonance
-
- 4AE-2.4 What is the approximate magnitude of the impedance of a
- series R-L-C circuit at resonance?
- A. High, as compared to the circuit resistance
- B. Approximately equal to the circuit resistance
- C. Approximately equal to XL
- D. Approximately equal to XC
-
- 4AE-2.5 What is the approximate magnitude of the impedance of a
- parallel R-L-C circuit at resonance?
- A. Approximately equal to the circuit resistance
- B. Approximately equal to XL
- C. Low, as compared to the circuit resistance
- D. Approximately equal to XC
-
- 4AE-2.6 What is the characteristic of the current flow in a
- series R-L-C circuit at resonance?
- A. It is at a minimum
- B. It is at a maximum
- C. It is DC
- D. It is zero
-
- 4AE-2.7 What is the characteristic of the current flow in a
- parallel R-L-C circuit at resonance?
- A. The current circulating in the parallel elements is at a
- minimum
- B. The current circulating in the parallel elements is at a
- maximum
- C. The current circulating in the parallel elements is DC
- D. The current circulating in the parallel elements is zero
-
- 4AE-3.1 What is the ++++skin effect++++?
- A. The phenomenon where RF current flows in a thinner layer of
- the conductor, close to the surface, as frequency increases
- B. The phenomenon where RF current flows in a thinner layer of
- the conductor, close to the surface, as frequency decreases
- C. The phenomenon where thermal effects on the surface of the
- conductor increase the impedance
- D. The phenomenon where thermal effects on the surface of the
- conductor decrease the impedance
-
- 4AE-3.2 What is the term for the phenomenon where most of an RF
- current flows along the surface of the conductor?
- A. Layer effect
- B. Seeburg Effect
- C. Skin effect
- D. Resonance
-
- 4AE-3.3 Where does practically all of the RF current flow in a
- conductor?
- A. Along the surface
- B. In the center of the conductor
- C. In the magnetic field around the conductor
- D. In the electromagnetic field in the conductor center
-
- 4AE-3.4 Why does practically all of an RF current flow within a
- few thousandths-of-an-inch of the conductor's surface?
- A. Because of skin effect
- B. Because the RF resistance of the conductor is much less
- than the DC resistance
- C. Because of heating of the metal at the conductor's interior
- D. Because of the AC-resistance of the conductor's self inductance
-
- 4AE-3.5 Why is the resistance of a conductor different for RF
- current than for DC?
- A. Because the insulation conducts current at radio
- frequencies
- B. Because of the Heisenburg Effect
- C. Because of skin effect
- D. Because conductors are non-linear devices
-
- 4AE-4.1 What is a ++++magnetic field++++?
- A. Current flow through space around a permanent magnet
- B. A force set up when current flows through a conductor
- C. The force between the plates of a charged capacitor
- D. The force that drives current through a resistor
-
- 4AE-4.2 In what direction is the magnetic field about a conductor
- when current is flowing?
- A. In the same direction as the current
- B. In a direction opposite to the current flow
- C. In all directions; omnidirectional
- D. In a direction determined by the left hand rule
-
- 4AE-4.3 What device is used to store electrical energy in an
- electrostatic field?
- A. A battery
- B. A transformer
- C. A capacitor
- D. An inductor
-
- 4AE-4.4 What is the term used to express the amount of electrical
- energy stored in an electrostatic field?
- A. Coulombs
- B. Joules
- C. Watts
- D. Volts
-
- 4AE-4.5 What factors determine the capacitance of a capacitor?
- A. Area of the plates, voltage on the plates and distance
- between the plates
- B. Area of the plates, distance between the plates and the
- dielectric constant of the material between the plates
- C. Area of the plates, voltage on the plates and the
- dielectric constant of the material between the plates
- D. Area of the plates, amount of charge on the plates and the
- dielectric constant of the material between the plates
-
- 4AE-4.6 What is the dielectric constant for air?
- A. Approximately 1
- B. Approximately 2
- C. Approximately 4
- D. Approximately 0
-
- 4AE-4.7 What determines the strength of the magnetic field around
- a conductor?
- A. The resistance divided by the current
- B. The ratio of the current to the resistance
- C. The diameter of the conductor
- D. The amount of current
-
- 4AE-5.1 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-1 when L is 50 microhenrys and C is 40 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 79.6 MHz
- B. 1.78 MHz
- C. 3.56 MHz
- D. 7.96 MHz
-
- 4AE-5.2 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-1 when L is 40 microhenrys and C is 200 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 1.99 kHz
- B. 1.78 MHz
- C. 1.99 MHz
- D. 1.78 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.3 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-1 when L is 50 microhenrys and C is 10 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 3.18 MHz
- B. 3.18 kHz
- C. 7.12 MHz
- D. 7.12 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.4 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-1 when L is 25 microhenrys and C is 10 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 10.1 MHz
- B. 63.7 MHz
- C. 10.1 kHz
- D. 63.7 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.5 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-1 when L is 3 microhenrys and C is 40 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 13.1 MHz
- B. 14.5 MHz
- C. 14.5 kHz
- D. 13.1 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.6 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-1 when L is 4 microhenrys and C is 20 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 19.9 kHz
- B. 17.8 kHz
- C. 19.9 MHz
- D. 17.8 MHz
-
- 4AE-5.7 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-1 when L is 8 microhenrys and C is 7 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 2.84 MHz
- B. 28.4 MHz
- C. 21.3 MHz
- D. 2.13 MHz
-
- 4AE-5.8 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-1 when L is 3 microhenrys and C is 15 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 23.7 MHz
- B. 23.7 kHz
- C. 35.4 kHz
- D. 35.4 MHz
-
- 4AE-5.9 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-1 when L is 4 microhenrys and C is 8 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 28.1 kHz
- B. 28.1 MHz
- C. 49.7 MHz
- D. 49.7 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.10 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-1 when L is 1 microhenry and C is 9 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 17.7 MHz
- B. 17.7 kHz
- C. 53.1 MHz
- D. 53.1 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.11 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-2 when L is 1 microhenry and C is 10 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 50.3 MHz
- B. 15.9 MHz
- C. 15.9 kHz
- D. 50.3 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.12 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-2 when L is 2 microhenrys and C is 15 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 29.1 kHz
- B. 29.1 MHz
- C. 5.31 MHz
- D. 5.31 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.13 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-2 when L is 5 microhenrys and C is 9 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 23.7 kHz
- B. 3.54 kHz
- C. 23.7 MHz
- D. 3.54 MHz
-
- 4AE-5.14 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-2 when L is 2 microhenrys and C is 30 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 2.65 kHz
- B. 20.5 kHz
- C. 2.65 MHz
- D. 20.5 MHz
-
- 4AE-5.15 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-2 when L is 15 microhenrys and C is 5 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 18.4 MHz
- B. 2.12 MHz
- C. 18.4 kHz
- D. 2.12 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.16 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-2 when L is 3 microhenrys and C is 40 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 1.33 kHz
- B. 14.5 MHz
- C. 1.33 MHz
- D. 14.5 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.17 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-2 when L is 40 microhenrys and C is 6 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 6.63 MHz
- B. 6.63 kHz
- C. 10.3 MHz
- D. 10.3 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.18 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-2 when L is 10 microhenrys and C is 50 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 3.18 MHz
- B. 3.18 kHz
- C. 7.12 kHz
- D. 7.12 MHz
-
- 4AE-5.19 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-2 when L is 200 microhenrys and C is 10 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 3.56 MHz
- B. 7.96 kHz
- C. 3.56 kHz
- D. 7.96 MHz
-
- 4AE-5.20 What is the resonant frequency of the circuit in Figure
- 4AE-5-2 when L is 90 microhenrys and C is 100 picofarads
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 1.77 MHz
- B. 1.68 MHz
- C. 1.77 kHz
- D. 1.68 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.21 What is the half-power bandwidth of a parallel resonant
- circuit which has a resonant frequency of 1.8 MHz and a Q of 95?
- A. 18.9 kHz
- B. 1.89 kHz
- C. 189 Hz
- D. 58.7 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.22 What is the half-power bandwidth of a parallel resonant
- circuit which has a resonant frequency of 3.6 MHz and a Q of 218?
- A. 58.7 kHz
- B. 606 kHz
- C. 47.3 kHz
- D. 16.5 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.23 What is the half-power bandwidth of a parallel resonant
- circuit which has a resonant frequency of 7.1 MHz and a Q of 150?
- A. 211 kHz
- B. 16.5 kHz
- C. 47.3 kHz
- D. 21.1 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.24 What is the half-power bandwidth of a parallel resonant
- circuit which has a resonant frequency of 12.8 MHz and a Q of
- 218?
- A. 21.1 kHz
- B. 27.9 kHz
- C. 17 kHz
- D. 58.7 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.25 What is the half-power bandwidth of a parallel resonant
- circuit which has a resonant frequency of 14.25 MHz and a Q of
- 150?
- A. 95 kHz
- B. 10.5 kHz
- C. 10.5 MHz
- D. 17 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.26 What is the half-power bandwidth of a parallel resonant
- circuit which has a resonant frequency of 21.15 MHz and a Q of
- 95?
- A. 4.49 kHz
- B. 44.9 kHz
- C. 22.3 kHz
- D. 222.6 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.27 What is the half-power bandwidth of a parallel resonant
- circuit which has a resonant frequency of 10.1 MHz and a Q of
- 225?
- A. 4.49 kHz
- B. 44.9 kHz
- C. 22.3 kHz
- D. 223 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.28 What is the half-power bandwidth of a parallel resonant
- circuit which has a resonant frequency of 18.1 MHz and a Q of
- 195?
- A. 92.8 kHz
- B. 10.8 kHz
- C. 22.3 kHz
- D. 44.9 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.29 What is the half-power bandwidth of a parallel resonant
- circuit which has a resonant frequency of 3.7 MHz and a Q of 118?
- A. 22.3 kHz
- B. 76.2 kHz
- C. 31.4 kHz
- D. 10.8 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.30 What is the half-power bandwidth of a parallel resonant
- circuit which has a resonant frequency of 14.25 MHz and a Q of
- 187?
- A. 22.3 kHz
- B. 10.8 kHz
- C. 13.1 kHz
- D. 76.2 kHz
-
- 4AE-5.31 What is the Q of the circuit in Figure 4AE-5-3 when the
- resonant frequency is 14.128 MHz, the inductance is 2.7
- microhenrys and the resistance is 18,000 ohms
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 75.1
- B. 7.51
- C. 71.5
- D. 0.013
-
- 4AE-5.32 What is the Q of the circuit in Figure 4AE-5-3 when the
- resonant frequency is 14.128 MHz, the inductance is 4.7
- microhenrys and the resistance is 18,000 ohms
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 4.31
- B. 43.1
- C. 13.3
- D. 0.023
-
- 4AE-5.33 What is the Q of the circuit in Figure 4AE-5-3 when the
- resonant frequency is 4.468 MHz, the inductance is 47 microhenrys
- and the resistance is 180 ohms
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 0.00735
- B. 7.35
- C. 0.136
- D. 13.3
-
- 4AE-5.34 What is the Q of the circuit in Figure 4AE-5-3 when the
- resonant frequency is 14.225 MHz, the inductance is 3.5
- microhenrys and the resistance is 10,000 ohms
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 7.35
- B. 0.0319
- C. 71.5
- D. 31.9
-
- 4AE-5.35 What is the Q of the circuit in Figure 4AE-5-3 when the
- resonant frequency is 7.125 MHz, the inductance is 8.2
- microhenrys and the resistance is 1,000 ohms
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 36.8
- B. 0.273
- C. 0.368
- D. 2.73
-
- 4AE-5.36 What is the Q of the circuit in Figure 4AE-5-3 when the
- resonant frequency is 7.125 MHz, the inductance is 10.1
- microhenrys and the resistance is 100 ohms
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 0.221
- B. 4.52
- C. 0.00452
- D. 22.1
-
- 4AE-5.37 What is the Q of the circuit in Figure 4AE-5-3 when the
- resonant frequency is 7.125 MHz, the inductance is 12.6
- microhenrys and the resistance is 22,000 ohms
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 22.1
- B. 39
- C. 25.6
- D. 0.0256
-
- 4AE-5.38 What is the Q of the circuit in Figure 4AE-5-3 when the
- resonant frequency is 3.625 MHz, the inductance is 3 microhenrys
- and the resistance is 2,200 ohms
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 0.031
- B. 32.2
- C. 31.1
- D. 25.6
-
- 4AE-5.39 What is the Q of the circuit in Figure 4AE-5-3 when the
- resonant frequency is 3.625 MHz, the inductance is 42 microhenrys
- and the resistance is 220 ohms
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 23
- B. 0.00435
- C. 4.35
- D. 0.23
-
- 4AE-5.40 What is the Q of the circuit in Figure 4AE-5-3 when the
- resonant frequency is 3.625 MHz, the inductance is 43 microhenrys
- and the resistance is 1,800 ohms
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 1.84
- B. 0.543
- C. 54.3
- D. 23
-
- 4AE-6.1 What is the phase angle between the voltage across and
- the current through the circuit in Figure 4AE-6, when Xc is 25
- ohms, R is 100 ohms, and Xl is 100 ohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 36.9 degrees with the voltage leading the current
- B. 53.1 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
- C. 36.9 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
- D. 53.1 degrees with the voltage leading the current
-
- 4AE-6.2 What is the phase angle between the voltage across and
- the current through the circuit in Figure 4AE-6, when Xc is 25
- ohms, R is 100 ohms, and Xl is 50 ohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 14 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
- B. 14 degrees with the voltage leading the current
- C. 76 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
- D. 76 degrees with the voltage leading the current
-
- 4AE-6.3 What is the phase angle between the voltage across and
- the current through the circuit in Figure 4AE-6, when Xc is 500
- ohms, R is 1000 ohms, and Xl is 250 ohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 68.2 degrees with the voltage leading the current
- B. 14.1 degrees with the voltage leading the current
- C. 14.1 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
- D. 68.2 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
-
- 4AE-6.4 What is the phase angle between the voltage across and
- the current through the circuit in Figure 4AE-6, when Xc is 75
- ohms, R is 100 ohms, and Xl is 100 ohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 76 degrees with the voltage leading the current
- B. 14 degrees with the voltage leading the current
- C. 14 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
- D. 76 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
-
- 4AE-6.5 What is the phase angle between the voltage across and
- the current through the circuit in Figure 4AE-6, when Xc is 50
- ohms, R is 100 ohms, and Xl is 25 ohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 76 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
- B. 14 degrees with the voltage leading the current
- C. 76 degrees with the voltage leading the current
- D. 14 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
-
- 4AE-6.6 What is the phase angle between the voltage across and
- the current through the circuit in Figure 4AE-6, when Xc is 75
- ohms, R is 100 ohms, and Xl is 50 ohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 76 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
- B. 14 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
- C. 14 degrees with the voltage leading the current
- D. 76 degrees with the voltage leading the current
-
- 4AE-6.7 What is the phase angle between the voltage across and
- the current through the circuit in Figure 4AE-6, when Xc is 100
- ohms, R is 100 ohms, and Xl is 75 ohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 14 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
- B. 14 degrees with the voltage leading the current
- C. 76 degrees with the voltage leading the current
- D. 76 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
-
- 4AE-6.8 What is the phase angle between the voltage across and
- the current through the circuit in Figure 4AE-6, when Xc is 250
- ohms, R is 1000 ohms, and Xl is 500 ohms
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 81.47 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
- B. 81.47 degrees with the voltage leading the current
- C. 14.04 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
- D. 14.04 degrees with the voltage leading the current
-
- 4AE-6.9 What is the phase angle between the voltage across and
- the current through the circuit in Figure 4AE-6, when Xc is 50
- ohms, R is 100 ohms, and Xl is 75 ohms
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 76 degrees with the voltage leading the current
- B. 76 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
- C. 14 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
- D. 14 degrees with the voltage leading the current
-
- 4AE-6.10 What is the phase angle between the voltage across and
- the current through the circuit in Figure 4AE-6, when Xc is 100
- ohms, R is 100 ohms, and Xl is 25 ohms
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 36.9 degrees with the voltage leading the current
- B. 53.1 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
- C. 36.9 degrees with the voltage lagging the current
- D. 53.1 degrees with the voltage leading the current
-
- 4AE-7.1 Why would the rate at which electrical energy is used in
- a circuit be less than the product of the magnitudes of the AC
- voltage and current?
- A. Because there is a phase angle that is greater than zero
- between the current and voltage
- B. Because there are only resistances in the circuit
- C. Because there are no reactances in the circuit
- D. Because there is a phase angle that is equal to zero
- between the current and voltage
-
- 4AE-7.2 In a circuit where the AC voltage and current are out of
- phase, how can the true power be determined?
- A. By multiplying the apparent power times the power factor
- B. By subtracting the apparent power from the power factor
- C. By dividing the apparent power by the power factor
- D. By multiplying the RMS voltage times the RMS current
-
- 4AE-7.3 What does the power factor equal in an R-L circuit having
- a 60 degree phase angle between the voltage and the current?
- A. 1.414
- B. 0.866
- C. 0.5
- D. 1.73
-
- 4AE-7.4 What does the power factor equal in an R-L circuit having
- a 45 degree phase angle between the voltage and the current?
- A. 0.866
- B. 1.0
- C. 0.5
- D. 0.707
-
- 4AE-7.5 What does the power factor equal in an R-L circuit having
- a 30 degree phase angle between the voltage and the current?
- A. 1.73
- B. 0.5
- C. 0.866
- D. 0.577
-
- 4AE-7.6 How many watts are being consumed in a circuit having a
- power factor of 0.2 when the input is 100-V AC and 4-amperes is
- being drawn?
- A. 400 watts
- B. 80 watts
- C. 2000 watts
- D. 50 watts
-
- 4AE-7.7 How many watts are being consumed in a circuit having a
- power factor of 0.6 when the input is 200-V AC and 5-amperes is
- being drawn?
- A. 200 watts
- B. 1000 watts
- C. 1600 watts
- D. 600 watts
-
- 4AE-8.1 What is the effective radiated power of a station in
- repeater operation with 50 watts transmitter power output, 4 dB
- feedline loss, 3 dB duplexer and circulator loss, and 6 dB
- antenna gain?
- A. 158 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- B. 39.7 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- C. 251 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- D. 69.9 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
-
- 4AE-8.2 What is the effective radiated power of a station in
- repeater operation with 50 watts transmitter power output, 5 dB
- feedline loss, 4 dB duplexer and circulator loss, and 7 dB
- antenna gain?
- A. 300 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- B. 315 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- C. 31.5 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- D. 69.9 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
-
- 4AE-8.3 What is the effective radiated power of a station in
- repeater operation with 75 watts transmitter power output, 4 dB
- feedline loss, 3 dB duplexer and circulator loss, and 10 dB
- antenna gain?
- A. 600 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- B. 75 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- C. 18.75 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- D. 150 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
-
- 4AE-8.4 What is the effective radiated power of a station in
- repeater operation with 75 watts transmitter power output, 5 dB
- feedline loss, 4 dB duplexer and circulator loss, and 6 dB
- antenna gain?
- A. 37.6 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- B. 237 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- C. 150 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- D. 23.7 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
-
- 4AE-8.5 What is the effective radiated power of a station in
- repeater operation with 100 watts transmitter power output, 4 dB
- feedline loss, 3 dB duplexer and circulator loss, and 7 dB
- antenna gain?
- A. 631 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- B. 400 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- C. 25 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- D. 100 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
-
- 4AE-8.6 What is the effective radiated power of a station in
- repeater operation with 100 watts transmitter power output, 5 dB
- feedline loss, 4 dB duplexer and circulator loss, and 10 dB
- antenna gain?
- A. 800 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- B. 126 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- C. 12.5 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- D. 1260 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
-
- 4AE-8.7 What is the effective radiated power of a station in
- repeater operation with l20 watts transmitter power output, 5 dB
- feedline loss, 4 dB duplexer and circulator loss, and 6 dB
- antenna gain?
- A. 601 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- B. 240 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- C. 60 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- D. 379 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
-
- 4AE-8.8 What is the effective radiated power of a station in
- repeater operation with 150 watts transmitter power output, 4 dB
- feedline loss, 3 dB duplexer and circulator loss, and 7 dB
- antenna gain?
- A. 946 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- B. 37.5 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- C. 600 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- D. 150 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
-
- 4AE-8.9 What is the effective radiated power of a station in
- repeater operation with 200 watts transmitter power output, 4 dB
- feedline loss, 4 dB duplexer and circulator loss, and 10 dB
- antenna gain?
- A. 317 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- B. 2000 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- C. 126 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- D. 260 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
-
- 4AE-8.10 What is the effective radiated power of a station in
- repeater operation with 200 watts transmitter power output, 4 dB
- feedline loss, 3 dB duplexer and circulator loss, and 6 dB
- antenna gain?
- A. 252 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- B. 63.2 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- C. 632 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
- D. 159 watts, assuming the antenna gain is referenced to a
- half-wave dipole
-
- 4AE-9.1 In Figure 4AE-9, what values of V2 and R3 result in the
- same voltage and current characteristics as when V1 is 8-volts,
- R1 is 8 kilohms, and R2 is 8 kilohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. R3 = 4 kilohms and V2 = 8 volts
- B. R3 = 4 kilohms and V2 = 4 volts
- C. R3 = 16 kilohms and V2 = 8 volts
- D. R3 = 16 kilohms and V2 = 4 volts
-
- 4AE-9.2 In Figure 4AE-9, what values of V2 and R3 result in the
- same voltage and current characteristics as when V1 is 8-volts,
- R1 is 16 kilohms, and R2 is 8 kilohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. R3 = 24 kilohms and V2 = 5.33 volts
- B. R3 = 5.33 kilohms and V2 = 8 volts
- C. R3 = 5.33 kilohms and V2 = 2.67 volts
- D. R3 = 24 kilohms and V2 = 8 volts
-
- 4AE-9.3 In Figure 4AE-9, what values of V2 and R3 result in the
- same voltage and current characteristics as when V1 is 8-volts,
- R1 is 8 kilohms, and R2 is 16 kilohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. R3 = 24 kilohms and V2 = 8 volts
- B. R3 = 8 kilohms and V2 = 4 volts
- C. R3 = 5.33 kilohms and V2 = 5.33 volts
- D. R3 = 5.33 kilohms and V2 = 8 volts
-
- 4AE-9.4 In Figure 4AE-9, what values of V2 and R3 result in the
- same voltage and current characteristics as when V1 is 10-volts,
- R1 is 10 kilohms, and R2 is 10 kilohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. R3 = 10 kilohms and V2 = 5 volts
- B. R3 = 20 kilohms and V2 = 5 volts
- C. R3 = 20 kilohms and V2 = 10 volts
- D. R3 = 5 kilohms and V2 = 5 volts
-
- 4AE-9.5 In Figure 4AE-9, what values of V2 and R3 result in the
- same voltage and current characteristics as when V1 is 10-volts,
- R1 is 20 kilohms, and R2 is 10 kilohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. R3 = 30 kilohms and V2 = 10 volts
- B. R3 = 6.67 kilohms and V2 = 10 volts
- C. R3 = 6.67 kilohms and V2 = 3.33 volts
- D. R3 = 30 kilohms and V2 = 3.33 volts
-
- 4AE-9.6 In Figure 4AE-9, what values of V2 and R3 result in the
- same voltage and current characteristics as when V1 is 10-volts,
- R1 is 10 kilohms, and R2 is 20 kilohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. R3 = 6.67 kilohms and V2 = 6.67 volts
- B. R3 = 6.67 kilohms and V2 = 10 volts
- C. R3 = 30 kilohms and V2 = 6.67 volts
- D. R3 = 30 kilohms and V2 = 10 volts
-
- 4AE-9.7 In Figure 4AE-9, what values of V2 and R3 result in the
- same voltage and current characteristics as when V1 is 12-volts,
- R1 is 10 kilohms, and R2 is 10 kilohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. R3 = 20 kilohms and V2 = 12 volts
- B. R3 = 5 kilohms and V2 = 6 volts
- C. R3 = 5 kilohms and V2 = 12 volts
- D. R3 = 30 kilohms and V2 = 6 volts
-
- 4AE-9.8 In Figure 4AE-9, what values of V2 and R3 result in the
- same voltage and current characteristics as when V1 is 12-volts,
- R1 is 20 kilohms, and R2 is 10 kilohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. R3 = 30 kilohms and V2 = 4 volts
- B. R3 = 6.67 kilohms and V2 = 4 volts
- C. R3 = 30 kilohms and V2 = 12 volts
- D. R3 = 6.67 kilohms and V2 = 12 volts
-
- 4AE-9.9 In Figure 4AE-9, what values of V2 and R3 result in the
- same voltage and current characteristics as when V1 is 12-volts,
- R1 is 10 kilohms, and R2 is 20 kilohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. R3 = 6.67 kilohms and V2 = 12 volts
- B. R3 = 30 kilohms and V2 = 12 volts
- C. R3 = 6.67 kilohms and V2 = 8 volts
- D. R3 = 30 kilohms and V2 = 8 volts
-
- 4AE-9.10 In Figure 4AE-9, what values of V2 and R3 result in the
- same voltage and current characteristics as when V1 is 12-volts,
- R1 is 20 kilohms, and R2 is 20 kilohms [see graphics addendum]?
- A. R3 = 40 kilohms and V2 = 12 volts
- B. R3 = 40 kilohms and V2 = 6 volts
- C. R3 = 10 kilohms and V2 = 6 volts
- D. R3 = 10 kilohms and V2 = 12 volts
-
- 4AF-1.1 What is the schematic symbol for a semiconductor
- diode/rectifier [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 1
- B. 2
- C. 3
- D. 4
-
- 4AF-1.2 Structurally, what are the two main categories of
- semiconductor diodes?
- A. Junction and point contact
- B. Electrolytic and junction
- C. Electrolytic and point contact
- D. Vacuum and point contact
-
- 4AF-1.3 What is the schematic symbol for a Zener diode [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 1
- B. 2
- C. 3
- D. 4
-
- 4AF-1.4 What are the two primary classifications of Zener diodes?
- A. Hot carrier and tunnel
- B. Varactor and rectifying
- C. Voltage regulator and voltage reference
- D. Forward and reversed biased
-
- 4AF-1.5 What is the principal characteristic of a Zener diode?
- A. A constant current under conditions of varying voltage
- B. A constant voltage under conditions of varying current
- C. A negative resistance region
- D. An internal capacitance that varies with the applied
- voltage
-
- 4AF-1.6 What is the range of voltage ratings available in Zener
- diodes?
- A. 2.4 volts to 200 volts
- B. 1.2 volts to 7 volts
- C. 3 volts to 2000 volts
- D. 1.2 volts to 5.6 volts
-
- 4AF-1.7 What is the schematic symbol for a tunnel diode [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 1
- B. 2
- C. 3
- D. 4
-
- 4AF-1.8 What is the principal characteristic of a tunnel diode?
- A. A high forward resistance
- B. A very high PIV
- C. A negative resistance region
- D. A high forward current rating
-
- 4AF-1.9 What special type of diode is capable of both
- amplification and oscillation?
- A. Point contact diodes
- B. Zener diodes
- C. Tunnel diodes
- D. Junction diodes
-
- 4AF-1.10 What is the schematic symbol for a varactor diode [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 1
- B. 2
- C. 3
- D. 4
-
- 4AF-1.11 What type of semiconductor diode varies its internal
- capacitance as the voltage applied to its terminals varies?
- A. A varactor diode
- B. A tunnel diode
- C. A silicon-controlled rectifier
- D. A Zener diode
-
- 4AF-1.12 What is the principal characteristic of a varactor
- diode?
- A. It has a constant voltage under conditions of varying
- current
- B. Its internal capacitance varies with the applied voltage
- C. It has a negative resistance region
- D. It has a very high PIV
-
- 4AF-1.13 What is a common use of a varactor diode?
- A. As a constant current source
- B. As a constant voltage source
- C. As a voltage controlled inductance
- D. As a voltage controlled capacitance
-
- 4AF-1.14 What is a common use of a hot-carrier diode?
- A. As balanced mixers in SSB generation
- B. As a variable capacitance in an automatic frequency control
- circuit
- C. As a constant voltage reference in a power supply
- D. As VHF and UHF mixers and detectors
-
- 4AF-1.15 What limits the maximum forward current in a junction
- diode?
- A. The peak inverse voltage
- B. The junction temperature
- C. The forward voltage
- D. The back EMF
-
- 4AF-1.16 How are junction diodes rated?
- A. Maximum forward current and capacitance
- B. Maximum reverse current and PIV
- C. Maximum reverse current and capacitance
- D. Maximum forward current and PIV
-
- 4AF-1.17 What is a common use for point contact diodes?
- A. As a constant current source
- B. As a constant voltage source
- C. As an RF detector
- D. As a high voltage rectifier
-
- 4AF-1.18 What type of diode is made of a metal whisker touching a
- very small semi-conductor die?
- A. Zener diode
- B. Varactor diode
- C. Junction diode
- D. Point contact diode
-
- 4AF-1.19 What is one common use for PIN diodes?
- A. As a constant current source
- B. As a constant voltage source
- C. As an RF switch
- D. As a high voltage rectifier
-
- 4AF-1.20 What special type of diode is often used in RF switches,
- attenuators, and various types of phase shifting devices?
- A. Tunnel diodes
- B. Varactor diodes
- C. PIN diodes
- D. Junction diodes
-
- 4AF-2.1 What is the schematic symbol for a PNP transistor [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 1
- B. 2
- C. 3
- D. 4
-
- 4AF-2.2 What is the schematic symbol for an NPN transistor [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 1
- B. 2
- C. 3
- D. 4
-
- 4AF-2.3 What are the three terminals of a bipolar transistor?
- A. Cathode, plate and grid
- B. Base, collector and emitter
- C. Gate, source and sink
- D. Input, output and ground
-
- 4AF-2.4 What is the meaning of the term ++++alpha++++ with regard to
- bipolar transistors?
- A. The change of collector current with respect to base
- current
- B. The change of base current with respect to collector
- current
- C. The change of collector current with respect to emitter
- current
- D. The change of collector current with respect to gate
- current
-
- 4AF-2.5 What is the term used to express the ratio of change in
- DC collector current to a change in emitter current in a bipolar
- transistor?
- A. Gamma
- B. Epsilon
- C. Alpha
- D. Beta
-
- 4AF-2.6 What is the meaning of the term ++++beta++++ with regard to
- bipolar transistors?
- A. The change of collector current with respect to base
- current
- B. The change of base current with respect to emitter current
- C. The change of collector current with respect to emitter
- current
- D. The change in base current with respect to gate current
-
- 4AF-2.7 What is the term used to express the ratio of change in
- the DC collector current to a change in base current in a bipolar
- transistor?
- A. Alpha
- B. Beta
- C. Gamma
- D. Delta
-
- 4AF-2.8 What is the meaning of the term ++++alpha cutoff frequency++++
- with regard to bipolar transistors?
- A. The practical lower frequency limit of a transistor in
- common emitter configuration
- B. The practical upper frequency limit of a transistor in
- common base configuration
- C. The practical lower frequency limit of a transistor in
- common base configuration
- D. The practical upper frequency limit of a transistor in
- common emitter configuration
-
- 4AF-2.9 What is the term used to express that frequency at which
- the grounded base current gain has decreased to 0.7 of the gain
- obtainable at 1 kHz in a transistor?
- A. Corner frequency
- B. Alpha cutoff frequency
- C. Beta cutoff frequency
- D. Alpha rejection frequency
-
- 4AF-2.10 What is the meaning of the term ++++beta cutoff frequency++++
- with regard to a bipolar transistor?
- A. That frequency at which the grounded base current gain has
- decreased to 0.7 of that obtainable at 1 kHz in a transistor
- B. That frequency at which the grounded emitter current gain
- has decreased to 0.7 of that obtainable at 1 kHz in a transistor
- C. That frequency at which the grounded collector current gain
- has decreased to 0.7 of that obtainable at 1 kHz in a transistor
- D. That frequency at which the grounded gate current gain has
- decreased to 0.7 of that obtainable at 1 kHz in a transistor
-
- 4AF-2.11 What is the meaning of the term ++++transition region++++ with
- regard to a transistor?
- A. An area of low charge density around the P-N junction
- B. The area of maximum P-type charge
- C. The area of maximum N-type charge
- D. The point where wire leads are connected to the P- or N-
- type material
-
- 4AF-2.12 What does it mean for a transistor to be ++++fully
- saturated++++?
- A. The collector current is at its maximum value
- B. The collector current is at its minimum value
- C. The transistor's Alpha is at its maximum value
- D. The transistor's Beta is at its maximum value
-
- 4AF-2.13 What does it mean for a transistor to be ++++cut off++++?
- A. There is no base current
- B. The transistor is at its operating point
- C. No current flows from emitter to collector
- D. Maximum current flows from emitter to collector
-
- 4AF-2.14 What is the schematic symbol for a unijunction
- transistor [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 1
- B. 2
- C. 3
- D. 4
-
- 4AF-2.15 What are the elements of a unijunction transistor?
- A. Base 1, base 2 and emitter
- B. Gate, cathode and anode
- C. Gate, base 1 and base 2
- D. Gate, source and sink
-
- 4AF-2.16 For best efficiency and stability, where on the load-
- line should a solid-state power amplifier be operated?
- A. Just below the saturation point
- B. Just above the saturation point
- C. At the saturation point
- D. At 1.414 times the saturation point
-
- 4AF-2.17 What two elements widely used in semiconductor devices
- exhibit both metallic and non-metallic characteristics?
- A. Silicon and gold
- B. Silicon and germanium
- C. Galena and germanium
- D. Galena and bismuth
-
- 4AF-3.1 What is the schematic symbol for a silicon controlled
- rectifier [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 1
- B. 2
- C. 3
- D. 4
-
- 4AF-3.2 What are the three terminals of an SCR?
- A. Anode, cathode and gate
- B. Gate, source and sink
- C. Base, collector and emitter
- D. Gate, base 1 and base 2
-
- 4AF-3.3 What are the two stable operating conditions of an SCR?
- A. Conducting and nonconducting
- B. Oscillating and quiescent
- C. Forward conducting and reverse conducting
- D. NPN conduction and PNP conduction
-
- 4AF-3.4 When an SCR is in the ++++triggered++++ or ++++on++++ condition, its
- electrical characteristics are similar to what other solid-state
- device (as measured between its cathode and anode)?
- A. The junction diode
- B. The tunnel diode
- C. The hot-carrier diode
- D. The varactor diode
-
- 4AF-3.5 Under what operating condition does an SCR exhibit
- electrical characteristics similar to a forward-biased silicon
- rectifier?
- A. During a switching transition
- B. When it is used as a detector
- C. When it is gated "off"
- D. When it is gated "on"
-
- 4AF-3.6 What is the schematic symbol for a TRIAC [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 1
- B. 2
- C. 3
- D. 4
-
- 4AF-3.7 What is the transistor called which is fabricated as two
- complementary SCRs in parallel with a common gate terminal?
- A. TRIAC
- B. Bilateral SCR
- C. Unijunction transistor
- D. Field effect transistor
-
- 4AF-3.8 What are the three terminals of a TRIAC?
- A. Emitter, base 1 and base 2
- B. Gate, anode 1 and anode 2
- C. Base, emitter and collector
- D. Gate, source and sink
-
- 4AF-4.1 What is the schematic symbol for a light-emitting diode [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 1
- B. 2
- C. 3
- D. 4
-
- 4AF-4.2 What is the normal operating voltage and current for a
- light-emitting diode?
- A. 60 volts and 20 mA
- B. 5 volts and 50 mA
- C. 1.7 volts and 20 mA
- D. 0.7 volts and 60 mA
-
- 4AF-4.3 What type of bias is required for an LED to produce
- luminescence?
- A. Reverse bias
- B. Forward bias
- C. Zero bias
- D. Inductive bias
-
- 4AF-4.4 What are the advantages of using an LED?
- A. Low power consumption and long life
- B. High lumens per cm per cm and low power consumption
- C. High lumens per cm per cm and low voltage requirement
- D. A current flows when the device is exposed to a light
- source
-
- 4AF-4.5 What colors are available in LEDs?
- A. Yellow, blue, red and brown
- B. Red, violet, yellow and peach
- C. Violet, blue, orange and red
- D. Red, green, orange and yellow
-
- 4AF-4.6 What is the schematic symbol for a neon lamp [see graphics addendum]?
- A. 1
- B. 2
- C. 3
- D. 4
-
- 4AF-4.7 What type neon lamp is usually used in amateur radio
- work?
- A. NE-1
- B. NE-2
- C. NE-3
- D. NE-4
-
- 4AF-4.8 What is the DC starting voltage for an NE-2 neon lamp?
- A. Approximately 67 volts
- B. Approximately 5 volts
- C. Approximately 5.6 volts
- D. Approximately 110 volts
-
- 4AF-4.9 What is the AC starting voltage for an NE-2 neon lamp?
- A. Approximately 110-V AC RMS
- B. Approximately 5-V AC RMS
- C. Approximately 5.6-V AC RMS
- D. Approximately 48-V AC RMS
-
- 4AF-4.10 How can a neon lamp be used to check for the presence of
- RF?
- A. A neon lamp will go out in the presence of RF
- B. A neon lamp will change color in the presence of RF
- C. A neon lamp will light only in the presence of very low
- frequency RF
- D. A neon lamp will light in the presence of RF
-
- 4AF-5.1 What would be the bandwidth of a good crystal lattice
- band-pass filter for a single-sideband phone emission?
- A. 6 kHz at -6 dB
- B. 2.1 kHz at -6 dB
- C. 500 Hz at -6 dB
- D. 15 kHz at -6 dB
-
- 4AF-5.2 What would be the bandwidth of a good crystal lattice
- band-pass filter for a double-sideband phone emission?
- A. 1 kHz at -6 dB
- B. 500 Hz at -6 dB
- C. 6 kHz at -6 dB
- D. 15 kHz at -6 dB
-
- 4AF-5.3 What is a crystal lattice filter?
- A. A power supply filter made with crisscrossed quartz
- crystals
- B. An audio filter made with 4 quartz crystals at 1-kHz
- intervals
- C. A filter with infinitely wide and shallow skirts made using
- quartz crystals
- D. A filter with narrow bandwidth and steep skirts made using
- quartz crystals
-
- 4AF-5.4 What technique can be used to construct low cost, high
- performance crystal lattice filters?
- A. Splitting and tumbling
- B. Tumbling and grinding
- C. Etching and splitting
- D. Etching and grinding
-
- 4AF-5.5 What determines the bandwidth and response shape in a
- crystal lattice filter?
- A. The relative frequencies of the individual crystals
- B. The center frequency chosen for the filter
- C. The amplitude of the RF stage preceding the filter
- D. The amplitude of the signals passing through the
- filter
-
- 4AG-1.1 What is a ++++linear electronic voltage regulator++++?
- A. A regulator that has a ramp voltage as its output
- B. A regulator in which the pass transistor switches from the
- "off" state to the "on" state
- C. A regulator in which the control device is switched on or
- off, with the duty cycle proportional to the line or load
- conditions
- D. A regulator in which the conduction of a control element is
- varied in direct proportion to the line voltage or load current
-
- 4AG-1.2 What is a ++++switching electronic voltage regulator++++?
- A. A regulator in which the conduction of a control element is
- varied in direct proportion to the line voltage or load current
- B. A regulator that provides more than one output voltage
- C. A regulator in which the control device is switched on or
- off, with the duty cycle proportional to the line or load
- conditions
- D. A regulator that gives a ramp voltage at its output
-
- 4AG-1.3 What device is usually used as a stable reference voltage
- in a linear voltage regulator?
- A. A Zener diode
- B. A tunnel diode
- C. An SCR
- D. A varactor diode
-
- 4AG-1.4 What type of linear regulator is used in applications
- requiring efficient utilization of the primary power source?
- A. A constant current source
- B. A series regulator
- C. A shunt regulator
- D. A shunt current source
-
- 4AG-1.5 What type of linear voltage regulator is used in
- applications where the load on the unregulated voltage source
- must be kept constant?
- A. A constant current source
- B. A series regulator
- C. A shunt current source
- D. A shunt regulator
-
- 4AG-1.6 To obtain the best temperature stability, what should be
- the operating voltage of the reference diode in a linear voltage
- regulator?
- A. Approximately 2.0 volts
- B. Approximately 3.0 volts
- C. Approximately 6.0 volts
- D. Approximately 10.0 volts
-
- 4AG-1.7 What is the meaning of the term ++++remote sensing++++ with
- regard to a linear voltage regulator?
- A. The feedback connection to the error amplifier is made
- directly to the load
- B. Sensing is accomplished by wireless inductive loops
- C. The load connection is made outside the feedback loop
- D. The error amplifier compares the input voltage to the
- reference voltage
-
- 4AG-1.8 What is a ++++three-terminal regulator++++?
- A. A regulator that supplies three voltages with variable
- current
- B. A regulator that supplies three voltages at a constant
- current
- C. A regulator containing three error amplifiers and sensing
- transistors
- D. A regulator containing a voltage reference, error
- amplifier, sensing resistors and transistors, and a pass element
-
- 4AG-1.9 What are the important characteristics of a three-
- terminal regulator?
- A. Maximum and minimum input voltage, minimum output current
- and voltage
- B. Maximum and minimum input voltage, maximum output current
- and voltage
- C. Maximum and minimum input voltage, minimum output current
- and maximum output voltage
- D. Maximum and minimum input voltage, minimum output voltage
- and maximum output current
-
- 4AG-2.1 What is the distinguishing feature of a Class A
- amplifier?
- A. Output for less than 180 degrees of the signal cycle
- B. Output for the entire 360 degrees of the signal cycle
- C. Output for more than 180 degrees and less than 360 degrees
- of the signal cycle
- D. Output for exactly 180 degrees of the input signal cycle
-
- 4AG-2.2 What class of amplifier is distinguished by the presence
- of output throughout the entire signal cycle and the input never
- goes into the cutoff region?
- A. Class A
- B. Class B
- C. Class C
- D. Class D
-
- 4AG-2.3 What is the distinguishing characteristic of a Class B
- amplifier?
- A. Output for the entire input signal cycle
- B. Output for greater than 180 degrees and less than 360
- degrees of the input signal cycle
- C. Output for less than 180 degrees of the input signal cycle
- D. Output for 180 degrees of the input signal cycle
-
- 4AG-2.4 What class of amplifier is distinguished by the flow of
- current in the output essentially in 180 degree pulses?
- A. Class A
- B. Class B
- C. Class C
- D. Class D
-
- 4AG-2.5 What is a ++++Class AB amplifier++++?
- A. Output is present for more than 180 degrees but less than
- 360 degrees of the signal input cycle
- B. Output is present for exactly 180 degrees of the input
- signal cycle
- C. Output is present for the entire input signal cycle
- D. Output is present for less than 180 degrees of the input
- signal cycle
-
- 4AG-2.6 What is the distinguishing feature of a ++++Class C
- amplifier++++?
- A. Output is present for less than 180 degrees of the input
- signal cycle
- B. Output is present for exactly 180 degrees of the input
- signal cycle
- C. Output is present for the entire input signal cycle
- D. Output is present for more than 180 degrees but less than
- 360 degrees of the input signal cycle
-
- 4AG-2.7 What class of amplifier is distinguished by the bias
- being set well beyond cutoff?
- A. Class A
- B. Class B
- C. Class C
- D. Class AB
-
- 4AG-2.8 Which class of amplifier provides the highest efficiency?
- A. Class A
- B. Class B
- C. Class C
- D. Class AB
-
- 4AG-2.9 Which class of amplifier has the highest linearity and
- least distortion?
- A. Class A
- B. Class B
- C. Class C
- D. Class AB
-
- 4AG-2.10 Which class of amplifier has an operating angle of more
- than 180 degrees but less than 360 degrees when driven by a sine
- wave signal?
- A. Class A
- B. Class B
- C. Class C
- D. Class AB
-
- 4AG-3.1 What is an ++++L-network++++?
- A. A network consisting entirely of four inductors
- B. A network consisting of an inductor and a capacitor
- C. A network used to generate a leading phase angle
- D. A network used to generate a lagging phase angle
-
- 4AG-3.2 What is a ++++pi-network++++?
- A. A network consisting entirely of four inductors or four
- capacitors
- B. A Power Incidence network
- C. An antenna matching network that is isolated from ground
- D. A network consisting of one inductor and two capacitors or
- two inductors and one capacitor
-
- 4AG-3.3 What is a ++++pi-L-network++++?
- A. A Phase Inverter Load network
- B. A network consisting of two inductors and two capacitors
- C. A network with only three discrete parts
- D. A matching network in which all components are isolated
- from ground
-
- 4AG-3.4 Does the L-, pi-, or pi-L-network provide the greatest
- harmonic suppression?
- A. L-network
- B. Pi-network
- C. Inverse L-network
- D. Pi-L-network
-
- 4AG-3.5 What are the three most commonly used networks to
- accomplish a match between an amplifying device and a
- transmission line?
- A. M-network, pi-network and T-network
- B. T-network, M-network and Q-network
- C. L-network, pi-network and pi-L-network
- D. L-network, M-network and C-network
-
- 4AG-3.6 How are networks able to transform one impedance to
- another?
- A. Resistances in the networks substitute for resistances in
- the load
- B. The matching network introduces negative resistance to
- cancel the resistive part of an impedance
- C. The matching network introduces transconductance to cancel
- the reactive part of an impedance
- D. The matching network can cancel the reactive part of an
- impedance and change the value of the resistive part of an
- impedance
-
- 4AG-3.7 Which type of network offers the greater transformation
- ratio?
- A. L-network
- B. Pi-network
- C. Constant-K
- D. Constant-M
-
- 4AG-3.8 Why is the L-network of limited utility in impedance
- matching?
- A. It matches a small impedance range
- B. It has limited power handling capabilities
- C. It is thermally unstable
- D. It is prone to self resonance
-
- 4AG-3.9 What is an advantage of using a pi-L-network instead of a
- pi-network for impedance matching between the final amplifier of
- a vacuum-tube type transmitter and a multiband antenna?
- A. Greater transformation range
- B. Higher efficiency
- C. Lower losses
- D. Greater harmonic suppression
-
- 4AG-3.10 Which type of network provides the greatest harmonic
- suppression?
- A. L-network
- B. Pi-network
- C. Pi-L-network
- D. Inverse-Pi network
-
- 4AG-4.1 What are the three general groupings of filters?
- A. High-pass, low-pass and band-pass
- B. Inductive, capacitive and resistive
- C. Audio, radio and capacitive
- D. Hartley, Colpitts and Pierce
-
- 4AG-4.2 What is a ++++constant-K filter++++?
- A. A filter that uses Boltzmann's constant
- B. A filter whose velocity factor is constant over a wide
- range of frequencies
- C. A filter whose product of the series- and shunt-element
- impedances is a constant for all frequencies
- D. A filter whose input impedance varies widely over the
- design bandwidth
-
- 4AG-4.3 What is an advantage of a constant-k filter?
- A. It has high attenuation for signals on frequencies far
- removed from the passband
- B. It can match impedances over a wide range of frequencies
- C. It uses elliptic functions
- D. The ratio of the cutoff frequency to the trap frequency can
- be varied
-
- 4AG-4.4 What is an ++++m-derived filter++++?
- A. A filter whose input impedance varies widely over the
- design bandwidth
- B. A filter whose product of the series- and shunt-element
- impedances is a constant for all frequencies
- C. A filter whose schematic shape is the letter "M"
- D. A filter that uses a trap to attenuate undesired
- frequencies too near cutoff for a constant-k filter.
-
- 4AG-4.5 What are the distinguishing features of a Butterworth
- filter?
- A. A filter whose product of the series- and shunt-element
- impedances is a constant for all frequencies
- B. It only requires capacitors
- C. It has a maximally flat response over its passband
- D. It requires only inductors
-
- 4AG-4.6 What are the distinguishing features of a Chebyshev
- filter?
- A. It has a maximally flat response over its passband
- B. It allows ripple in the passband
- C. It only requires inductors
- D. A filter whose product of the series- and shunt-element
- impedances is a constant for all frequencies
-
- 4AG-4.7 When would it be more desirable to use an m-derived
- filter over a constant-k filter?
- A. When the response must be maximally flat at one frequency
- B. When you need more attenuation at a certain frequency that
- is too close to the cut-off frequency for a constant-k filter
- C. When the number of components must be minimized
- D. When high power levels must be filtered
-
- 4AG-5.1 What condition must exist for a circuit to oscillate?
- A. It must have a gain of less than 1
- B. It must be neutralized
- C. It must have positive feedback sufficient to overcome
- losses
- D. It must have negative feedback sufficient to cancel the
- input
-
- 4AG-5.2 What are three major oscillator circuits often used in
- amateur radio equipment?
- A. Taft, Pierce and negative feedback
- B. Colpitts, Hartley and Taft
- C. Taft, Hartley and Pierce
- D. Colpitts, Hartley and Pierce
-
- 4AG-5.3 How is the positive feedback coupled to the input in a
- Hartley oscillator?
- A. Through a neutralizing capacitor
- B. Through a capacitive divider
- C. Through link coupling
- D. Through a tapped coil
-
- 4AG-5.4 How is the positive feedback coupled to the input in a
- Colpitts oscillator?
- A. Through a tapped coil
- B. Through link coupling
- C. Through a capacitive divider
- D. Through a neutralizing capacitor
-
- 4AG-5.5 How is the positive feedback coupled to the input in a
- Pierce oscillator?
- A. Through a tapped coil
- B. Through link coupling
- C. Through a capacitive divider
- D. Through capacitive coupling
-
- 4AG-5.6 Which of the three major oscillator circuits used in
- amateur radio equipment utilizes a quartz crystal?
- A. Negative feedback
- B. Hartley
- C. Colpitts
- D. Pierce
-
- 4AG-5.7 What is the ++++piezoelectric effect++++?
- A. Mechanical vibration of a crystal by the application of a
- voltage
- B. Mechanical deformation of a crystal by the application of a
- magnetic field
- C. The generation of electrical energy by the application of
- light
- D. Reversed conduction states when a P-N junction is exposed
- to light
-
- 4AG-5.8 What is the major advantage of a Pierce oscillator?
- A. It is easy to neutralize
- B. It doesn't require an LC tank circuit
- C. It can be tuned over a wide range
- D. It has a high output power
-
- 4AG-5.9 Which type of oscillator circuit is commonly used in a
- VFO?
- A. Pierce
- B. Colpitts
- C. Hartley
- D. Negative feedback
-
- 4AG-5.10 Why is the Colpitts oscillator circuit commonly used in
- a VFO?
- A. The frequency is a linear function of the load impedance
- B. It can be used with or without crystal lock-in
- C. It is stable
- D. It has high output power
-
- 4AG-6.1 What is meant by the term ++++modulation++++?
- A. The squelching of a signal until a critical signal-to-noise
- ratio is reached
- B. Carrier rejection through phase nulling
- C. A linear amplification mode
- D. A mixing process whereby information is imposed upon a
- carrier
-
- 4AG-6.2 How is an F3E FM-phone emission produced?
- A. With a balanced modulator on the audio amplifier
- B. With a reactance modulator on the oscillator
- C. With a reactance modulator on the final amplifier
- D. With a balanced modulator on the oscillator
-
- 4AG-6.3 What is a ++++reactance modulator++++?
- A. A circuit that acts as a variable resistance or capacitance
- to produce FM signals
- B. A circuit that acts as a variable resistance or capacitance
- to produce AM signals
- C. A circuit that acts as a variable inductance or capacitance
- to produce FM signals
- D. A circuit that acts as a variable inductance or capacitance
- to produce AM signals
-
- 4AG-6.4 What is a ++++balanced modulator++++?
- A. An FM modulator that produces a balanced deviation
- B. A modulator that produces a double sideband, suppressed
- carrier signal
- C. A modulator that produces a single sideband, suppressed
- carrier signal
- D. A modulator that produces a full carrier signal
-
- 4AG-6.5 How can a single-sideband phone signal be generated?
- A. By driving a product detector with a DSB signal
- B. By using a reactance modulator followed by a mixer
- C. By using a loop modulator followed by a mixer
- D. By using a balanced modulator followed by a filter
-
- 4AG-6.6 How can a double-sideband phone signal be generated?
- A. By feeding a phase modulated signal into a low pass filter
- B. By using a balanced modulator followed by a filter
- C. By detuning a Hartley oscillator
- D. By modulating the plate voltage of a class C amplifier
-
- 4AG-7.1 How is the efficiency of a power amplifier determined?
- A. Efficiency = (RF power out / DC power in) X 100%
- B. Efficiency = (RF power in / RF power out) X 100%
- C. Efficiency = (RF power in / DC power in) X 100%
- D. Efficiency = (DC power in / RF power in) X 100%
-
- 4AG-7.2 For reasonably efficient operation of a vacuum-tube Class
- C amplifier, what should the plate-load resistance be with 1500-
- volts at the plate and 500-milliamperes plate current?
- A. 2000 ohms
- B. 1500 ohms
- C. 4800 ohms
- D. 480 ohms
-
- 4AG-7.3 For reasonably efficient operation of a vacuum-tube Class
- B amplifier, what should the plate-load resistance be with 800-
- volts at the plate and 75-milliamperes plate current?
- A. 679.4 ohms
- B. 60 ohms
- C. 6794 ohms
- D. 10,667 ohms
-
- 4AG-7.4 For reasonably efficient operation of a vacuum-tube Class
- A amplifier, what should the plate-load resistance be with 250-
- volts at the plate and 25-milliamperes plate current?
- A. 7692 ohms
- B. 3250 ohms
- C. 325 ohms
- D. 769.2 ohms
-
- 4AG-7.5 For reasonably efficient operation of a transistor
- amplifier, what should the load resistance be with 12-volts at
- the collector and 5 watts power output?
- A. 100.3 ohms
- B. 14.4 ohms
- C. 10.3 ohms
- D. 144 ohms
-
- 4AG-7.6 What is the ++++flywheel effect++++?
- A. The continued motion of a radio wave through space when the
- transmitter is turned off
- B. The back and forth oscillation of electrons in an LC
- circuit
- C. The use of a capacitor in a power supply to filter
- rectified AC
- D. The transmission of a radio signal to a distant station by
- several hops through the ionosphere
-
- 4AG-7.7 How can a power amplifier be neutralized?
- A. By increasing the grid drive
- B. By feeding back an in-phase component of the output to the
- input
- C. By feeding back an out-of-phase component of the output to
- the input
- D. By feeding back an out-of-phase component of the input to
- the output
-
- 4AG-7.8 What order of Q is required by a tank-circuit sufficient
- to reduce harmonics to an acceptable level?
- A. Approximately 120
- B. Approximately 12
- C. Approximately 1200
- D. Approximately 1.2
-
- 4AG-7.9 How can parasitic oscillations be eliminated from a power
- amplifier?
- A. By tuning for maximum SWR
- B. By tuning for maximum power output
- C. By neutralization
- D. By tuning the output
-
- 4AG-7.10 What is the procedure for tuning a power amplifier
- having an output pi-network?
- A. Adjust the loading capacitor to maximum capacitance and
- then dip the plate current with the tuning capacitor
- B. Alternately increase the plate current with the tuning
- capacitor and dip the plate current with the loading capacitor
- C. Adjust the tuning capacitor to maximum capacitance and then
- dip the plate current with the loading capacitor
- D. Alternately increase the plate current with the loading
- capacitor and dip the plate current with the tuning capacitor
-
- 4AG-8.1 What is the process of ++++detection++++?
- A. The process of masking out the intelligence on a received
- carrier to make an S-meter operational
- B. The recovery of intelligence from the modulated RF signal
- C. The modulation of a carrier
- D. The mixing of noise with the received signal
-
- 4AG-8.2 What is the principle of detection in a diode detector?
- A. Rectification and filtering of RF
- B. Breakdown of the Zener voltage
- C. Mixing with noise in the transition region of the diode
- D. The change of reactance in the diode with respect to
- frequency
-
- 4AG-8.3 What is a ++++product detector++++?
- A. A detector that provides local oscillations for input to
- the mixer
- B. A detector that amplifies and narrows the band-pass
- frequencies
- C. A detector that uses a mixing process with a locally
- generated carrier
- D. A detector used to detect cross-modulation products
-
- 4AG-8.4 How are FM-phone signals detected?
- A. By a balanced modulator
- B. By a frequency discriminator
- C. By a product detector
- D. By a phase splitter
-
- 4AG-8.5 What is a ++++frequency discriminator++++?
- A. A circuit for detecting FM signals
- B. A circuit for filtering two closely adjacent signals
- C. An automatic bandswitching circuit
- D. An FM generator
-
- 4AG-8.6 What is the ++++mixing process++++?
- A. The elimination of noise in a wideband receiver by phase
- comparison
- B. The elimination of noise in a wideband receiver by phase
- differentiation
- C. Distortion caused by auroral propagation
- D. The combination of two signals to produce sum and
- difference frequencies
-
- 4AG-8.7 What are the principal frequencies which appear at the
- output of a mixer circuit?
- A. Two and four times the original frequency
- B. The sum, difference and square root of the input
- frequencies
- C. The original frequencies and the sum and difference
- frequencies
- D. 1.414 and 0.707 times the input frequency
-
- 4AG-8.8 What are the advantages of the frequency-conversion
- process?
- A. Automatic squelching and increased selectivity
- B. Increased selectivity and optimal tuned-circuit design
- C. Automatic soft limiting and automatic squelching
- D. Automatic detection in the RF amplifier and increased
- selectivity
-
- 4AG-8.9 What occurs in a receiver when an excessive amount of
- signal energy reaches the mixer circuit?
- A. Spurious mixer products are generated
- B. Mixer blanking occurs
- C. Automatic limiting occurs
- D. A beat frequency is generated
-
- 4AG-9.1 How much gain should be used in the RF amplifier stage of
- a receiver?
- A. As much gain as possible short of self oscillation
- B. Sufficient gain to allow weak signals to overcome noise
- generated in the first mixer stage
- C. Sufficient gain to keep weak signals below the noise of the
- first mixer stage
- D. It depends on the amplification factor of the first IF
- stage
-
- 4AG-9.2 Why should the RF amplifier stage of a receiver only have
- sufficient gain to allow weak signals to overcome noise generated
- in the first mixer stage?
- A. To prevent the sum and difference frequencies from being
- generated
- B. To prevent bleed-through of the desired signal
- C. To prevent the generation of spurious mixer products
- D. To prevent bleed-through of the local oscillator
-
- 4AG-9.3 What is the primary purpose of an RF amplifier in a
- receiver?
- A. To provide most of the receiver gain
- B. To vary the receiver image rejection by utilizing the AGC
- C. To improve the receiver's noise figure
- D. To develop the AGC voltage
-
- 4AG-9.4 What is an ++++i-f amplifier stage++++?
- A. A fixed-tuned pass-band amplifier
- B. A receiver demodulator
- C. A receiver filter
- D. A buffer oscillator
-
- 4AG-9.5 What factors should be considered when selecting an
- intermediate frequency?
- A. Cross-modulation distortion and interference
- B. Interference to other services
- C. Image rejection and selectivity
- D. Noise figure and distortion
-
- 4AG-9.6 What is the primary purpose of the first i-f amplifier
- stage in a receiver?
- A. Noise figure performance
- B. Tune out cross-modulation distortion
- C. Dynamic response
- D. Selectivity
-
- 4AG-9.7 What is the primary purpose of the final i-f amplifier
- stage in a receiver?
- A. Dynamic response
- B. Gain
- C. Noise figure performance
- D. Bypass undesired signals
-
- 4AG-10.1 What type of circuit is shown in Figure 4AG-10 [see graphics addendum]?
- A. Switching voltage regulator
- B. Linear voltage regulator
- C. Common emitter amplifier
- D. Emitter follower amplifier
-
- 4AG-10.2 In Figure 4AG-10, what is the purpose of R1 and R2 [see graphics addendum]?
- A. Load resistors
- B. Fixed bias
- C. Self bias
- D. Feedback
-
- 4AG-10.3 In Figure 4AG-10, what is the purpose of C1 [see graphics addendum]?
- A. Decoupling
- B. Output coupling
- C. Self bias
- D. Input coupling
-
- 4AG-10.4 In Figure 4AG-10, what is the purpose of C3 [see graphics addendum]?
- A. AC feedback
- B. Input coupling
- C. Power supply decoupling
- D. Emitter bypass
-
- 4AG-10.5 In Figure 4AG-10, what is the purpose of R3 [see graphics addendum]?
- A. Fixed bias
- B. Emitter bypass
- C. Output load resistor
- D. Self bias
-
- 4AG-11.1 What type of circuit is shown in Figure 4AG-11 [see graphics addendum]?
- A. High-gain amplifier
- B. Common-collector amplifier
- C. Linear voltage regulator
- D. Grounded-emitter amplifier
-
- 4AG-11.2 In Figure 4AG-11, what is the purpose of R [see graphics addendum]?
- A. Emitter load
- B. Fixed bias
- C. Collector load
- D. Voltage regulation
-
- 4AG-11.3 In Figure 4AG-11, what is the purpose of C1 [see graphics addendum]?
- A. Input coupling
- B. Output coupling
- C. Emitter bypass
- D. Collector bypass
-
- 4AG-11.4 In Figure 4AG-11, what is the purpose of C2 [see graphics addendum]?
- A. Output coupling
- B. Emitter bypass
- C. Input coupling
- D. Hum filtering
-
- 4AG-12.1 What type of circuit is shown in Figure 4AG-12
- [see graphics addendum]?
- A. Switching voltage regulator
- B. Grounded emitter amplifier
- C. Linear voltage regulator
- D. Emitter follower
-
- 4AG-12.2 What is the purpose of D1 in the circuit shown in Figure
- 4AG-12 [see graphics addendum]?
- A. Line voltage stabilization
- B. Voltage reference
- C. Peak clipping
- D. Hum filtering
-
- 4AG-12.3 What is the purpose of Q1 in the circuit shown in Figure
- 4AG-12 [see graphics addendum]?
- A. It increases the output ripple
- B. It provides a constant load for the voltage source
- C. It increases the current handling capability
- D. It provides D1 with current
-
- 4AG-12.4 What is the purpose of C1 in the circuit shown in Figure
- 4AG-12 [see graphics addendum]?
- A. It resonates at the ripple frequency
- B. It provides fixed bias for Q1
- C. It decouples the output
- D. It filters the supply voltage
-
- 4AG-12.5 What is the purpose of C2 in the circuit shown in Figure
- 4AG-12 [see graphics addendum]?
- A. It bypasses hum around D1
- B. It is a brute force filter for the output
- C. To self resonate at the hum frequency
- D. To provide fixed DC bias for Q1
-
- 4AG-12.6 What is the purpose of C3 in the circuit shown in Figure
- 4AG-12 [see graphics addendum]?
- A. It prevents self-oscillation
- B. It provides brute force filtering of the output
- C. It provides fixed bias for Q1
- D. It clips the peaks of the ripple
-
- 4AG-12.7 What is the purpose of R1 in the circuit shown in Figure
- 4AG-12 [see graphics addendum]?
- A. It provides a constant load to the voltage source
- B. It couples hum to D1
- C. It supplies current to D1
- D. It bypasses hum around D1
-
- 4AG-12.8 What is the purpose of R2 in the circuit shown in Figure
- 4AG-12 [see graphics addendum]?
- A. It provides fixed bias for Q1
- B. It provides fixed bias for D1
- C. It decouples hum from D1
- D. It provides a constant minimum load for Q1
-
- 4AG-13.1 What value capacitor would be required to tune a 20-
- microhenry inductor to resonate in the 80-meter wavelength band?
- A. 150 picofarads
- B. 200 picofarads
- C. 100 picofarads
- D. 100 microfarads
-
- 4AG-13.2 What value inductor would be required to tune a 100-
- picofarad capacitor to resonate in the 40-meter wavelength band?
- A. 200 microhenrys
- B. 150 microhenrys
- C. 5 millihenrys
- D. 5 microhenrys
-
- 4AG-13.3 What value capacitor would be required to tune a 2-
- microhenry inductor to resonate in the 20-meter wavelength band?
- A. 64 picofarads
- B. 6 picofarads
- C. 12 picofarads
- D. 88 microfarads
-
- 4AG-13.4 What value inductor would be required to tune a 15-
- picofarad capacitor to resonate in the 15-meter wavelength band?
- A. 2 microhenrys
- B. 30 microhenrys
- C. 4 microhenrys
- D. 15 microhenrys
-
- 4AG-13.5 What value capacitor would be required to tune a 100-
- microhenry inductor to resonate in the 160-meter wavelength band?
- A. 78 picofarads
- B. 25 picofarads
- C. 405 picofarads
- D. 40.5 microfarads
-
- 4AH-1.1 What is emission ++++A3C++++?
- A. Facsimile
- B. RTTY
- C. ATV
- D. Slow Scan TV
-
- 4AH-1.2 What type of emission is produced when an amplitude
- modulated transmitter is modulated by a facsimile signal?
- A. A3F
- B. A3C
- C. F3F
- D. F3C
-
- 4AH-1.3 What is ++++facsimile++++?
- A. The transmission of tone-modulated telegraphy
- B. The transmission of a pattern of printed characters
- designed to form a picture
- C. The transmission of printed pictures by electrical means
- D. The transmission of moving pictures by electrical means
-
- 4AH-1.4 What is emission ++++F3C++++?
- A. Voice transmission
- B. Slow Scan TV
- C. RTTY
- D. Facsimile
-
- 4AH-1.5 What type of emission is produced when a frequency
- modulated transmitter is modulated by a facsimile signal?
- A. F3C
- B. A3C
- C. F3F
- D. A3F
-
- 4AH-1.6 What is emission ++++A3F++++?
- A. RTTY
- B. Television
- C. SSB
- D. Modulated CW
-
- 4AH-1.7 What type of emission is produced when an amplitude
- modulated transmitter is modulated by a television signal?
- A. F3F
- B. A3F
- C. A3C
- D. F3C
-
- 4AH-1.8 What is emission ++++F3F++++?
- A. Modulated CW
- B. Facsimile
- C. RTTY
- D. Television
-
- 4AH-1.9 What type of emission is produced when a frequency
- modulated transmitter is modulated by a television signal?
- A. A3F
- B. A3C
- C. F3F
- D. F3C
-
- 4AH-1.10 What type of emission results when a single sideband
- transmitter is used for slow-scan television?
- A. J3A
- B. F3F
- C. A3F
- D. J3F
-
- 4AH-2.1 How can an FM-phone signal be produced?
- A. By modulating the supply voltage to a class-B amplifier
- B. By modulating the supply voltage to a class-C amplifier
- C. By using a reactance modulator on an oscillator
- D. By using a balanced modulator on an oscillator
-
- 4AH-2.2 How can a double-sideband phone signal be produced?
- A. By using a reactance modulator on an oscillator
- B. By varying the voltage to the varactor in an oscillator
- circuit
- C. By using a phase detector, oscillator and filter in a
- feedback loop
- D. By modulating the plate supply voltage to a class C
- amplifier
-
- 4AH-2.3 How can a single-sideband phone signal be produced?
- A. By producing a double sideband signal with a balanced
- modulator and then removing the unwanted sideband by filtering
- B. By producing a double sideband signal with a balanced
- modulator and then removing the unwanted sideband by heterodyning
- C. By producing a double sideband signal with a balanced
- modulator and then removing the unwanted sideband by mixing
- D. By producing a double sideband signal with a balanced
- modulator and then removing the unwanted sideband by
- neutralization
-
- 4AH-3.1 What is meant by the term ++++deviation ratio++++?
- A. The ratio of the audio modulating frequency to the center
- carrier frequency
- B. The ratio of the maximum carrier frequency deviation to the
- highest audio modulating frequency
- C. The ratio of the carrier center frequency to the audio
- modulating frequency
- D. The ratio of the highest audio modulating frequency to the
- average audio modulating frequency
-
- 4AH-3.2 In an FM-phone signal, what is the term for the maximum
- deviation from the carrier frequency divided by the maximum audio
- modulating frequency?
- A. Deviation index
- B. Modulation index
- C. Deviation ratio
- D. Modulation ratio
-
- 4AH-3.3 What is the deviation ratio for an FM-phone signal having
- a maximum frequency swing of plus or minus 5 kHz and accepting a
- maximum modulation rate of 3 kHz?
- A. 60
- B. 0.16
- C. 0.6
- D. 1.66
-
- 4AH-3.4 What is the deviation ratio of an FM-phone signal having
- a maximum frequency swing of plus or minus 7.5 kHz and accepting
- a maximum modulation rate of 3.5 kHz?
- A. 2.14
- B. 0.214
- C. 0.47
- D. 47
-
- 4AH-4.1 What is meant by the term ++++modulation index++++?
- A. The processor index
- B. The ratio between the deviation of a frequency modulated
- signal and the modulating frequency
- C. The FM signal-to-noise ratio
- D. The ratio of the maximum carrier frequency deviation to the
- highest audio modulating frequency
-
- 4AH-4.2 In an FM-phone signal, what is the term for the ratio
- between the deviation of the frequency-modulated signal and the
- modulating frequency?
- A. FM compressibility
- B. Quieting index
- C. Percentage of modulation
- D. Modulation index
-
- 4AH-4.3 How does the modulation index of a phase-modulated
- emission vary with the modulated frequency?
- A. The modulation index increases as the RF carrier frequency
- (the modulated frequency) increases
- B. The modulation index decreases as the RF carrier frequency
- (the modulated frequency) increases
- C. The modulation index varies with the square root of the RF
- carrier frequency (the modulated frequency)
- D. The modulation index does not depend on the RF carrier
- frequency (the modulated frequency)
-
- 4AH-4.4 In an FM-phone signal having a maximum frequency
- deviation of 3000 Hz either side of the carrier frequency, what
- is the modulation index when the modulating frequency is 1000 Hz?
- A. 3
- B. 0.3
- C. 3000
- D. 1000
-
- 4AH-4.5 What is the modulation index of an FM-phone transmitter
- producing an instantaneous carrier deviation of 6 kHz when
- modulated with a 2-kHz modulating frequency?
- A. 6000
- B. 3
- C. 2000
- D. 1/3
-
- 4AH-5.1 What are ++++electromagnetic waves++++?
- A. Alternating currents in the core of an electromagnet
- B. A wave consisting of two electric fields at right angles to
- each other
- C. A wave consisting of an electric field and a magnetic field
- at right angles to each other
- D. A wave consisting of two magnetic fields at right angles to
- each other
-
- 4AH-5.2 What is a ++++wave front++++?
- A. A voltage pulse in a conductor
- B. A current pulse in a conductor
- C. A voltage pulse across a resistor
- D. A fixed point in an electromagnetic wave
-
- 4AH-5.3 At what speed do electromagnetic waves travel in free
- space?
- A. Approximately 300 million meters per second
- B. Approximately 468 million meters per second
- C. Approximately 186,300 feet per second
- D. Approximately 300 million miles per second
-
- 4AH-5.4 What are the two interrelated fields considered to make
- up an electromagnetic wave?
- A. An electric field and a current field
- B. An electric field and a magnetic field
- C. An electric field and a voltage field
- D. A voltage field and a current field
-
- 4AH-5.5 Why do electromagnetic waves not penetrate a good
- conductor to any great extent?
- A. The electromagnetic field induces currents in the insulator
- B. The oxide on the conductor surface acts as a shield
- C. Because of Eddy currents
- D. The resistivity of the conductor dissipates the field
-
- 4AH-6.1 What is meant by referring to electromagnetic waves
- traveling in free space?
- A. The electric and magnetic fields eventually become aligned
- B. Propagation in a medium with a high refractive index
- C. The electromagnetic wave encounters the ionosphere and
- returns to its source
- D. Propagation of energy across a vacuum by changing electric
- and magnetic fields
-
- 4AH-6.2 What is meant by referring to electromagnetic waves as
- ++++horizontally polarized++++?
- A. The electric field is parallel to the earth
- B. The magnetic field is parallel to the earth
- C. Both the electric and magnetic fields are horizontal
- D. Both the electric and magnetic fields are vertical
-
- 4AH-6.3 What is meant by referring to electromagnetic waves as
- having ++++circular polarization++++?
- A. The electric field is bent into a circular shape
- B. The electric field rotates
- C. The electromagnetic wave continues to circle the earth
- D. The electromagnetic wave has been generated by a quad
- antenna
-
- 4AH-6.4 When the electric field is perpendicular to the surface
- of the earth, what is the polarization of the electromagnetic
- wave?
- A. Circular
- B. Horizontal
- C. Vertical
- D. Elliptical
-
- 4AH-6.5 When the magnetic field is parallel to the surface of the
- earth, what is the polarization of the electromagnetic wave?
- A. Circular
- B. Horizontal
- C. Elliptical
- D. Vertical
-
- 4AH-6.6 When the magnetic field is perpendicular to the surface
- of the earth, what is the polarization of the electromagnetic
- field?
- A. Horizontal
- B. Circular
- C. Elliptical
- D. Vertical
-
- 4AH-6.7 When the electric field is parallel to the surface of the
- earth, what is the polarization of the electromagnetic wave?
- A. Vertical
- B. Horizontal
- C. Circular
- D. Elliptical
-
- 4AH-7.1 What is a ++++sine wave++++?
- A. A constant-voltage, varying-current wave
- B. A wave whose amplitude at any given instant can be
- represented by a point on a wheel rotating at a uniform speed
- C. A wave following the laws of the trigonometric tangent
- function
- D. A wave whose polarity changes in a random manner
-
- 4AH-7.2 How many times does a sine wave cross the zero axis in
- one complete cycle?
- A. 180 times
- B. 4 times
- C. 2 times
- D. 360 times
-
- 4AH-7.3 How many degrees are there in one complete sine wave
- cycle?
- A. 90 degrees
- B. 270 degrees
- C. 180 degrees
- D. 360 degrees
-
- 4AH-7.4 What is the ++++period++++ of a wave?
- A. The time required to complete one cycle
- B. The number of degrees in one cycle
- C. The number of zero crossings in one cycle
- D. The amplitude of the wave
-
- 4AH-7.5 What is a ++++square++++ wave?
- A. A wave with only 300 degrees in one cycle
- B. A wave which abruptly changes back and forth between two
- voltage levels and which remains an equal time at each level
- C. A wave that makes four zero crossings per cycle
- D. A wave in which the positive and negative excursions occupy
- unequal portions of the cycle time
-
- 4AH-7.6 What is a wave called which abruptly changes back and
- forth between two voltage levels and which remains an equal time
- at each level?
- A. A sine wave
- B. A cosine wave
- C. A square wave
- D. A rectangular wave
-
- 4AH-7.7 Which sine waves make up a square wave?
- A. 0.707 times the fundamental frequency
- B. The fundamental frequency and all odd and even harmonics
- C. The fundamental frequency and all even harmonics
- D. The fundamental frequency and all odd harmonics
-
- 4AH-7.8 What type of wave is made up of sine waves of the
- fundamental frequency and all the odd harmonics?
- A. Square wave
- B. Sine wave
- C. Cosine wave
- D. Tangent wave
-
- 4AH-7.9 What is a ++++sawtooth++++ wave?
- A. A wave that alternates between two values and spends an
- equal time at each level
- B. A wave with a straight line rise time faster than the fall
- time (or vice versa)
- C. A wave that produces a phase angle tangent to the unit
- circle
- D. A wave whose amplitude at any given instant can be
- represented by a point on a wheel rotating at a uniform speed
-
- 4AH-7.10 What type of wave is characterized by a rise time
- significantly faster than the fall time (or vice versa)?
- A. A cosine wave
- B. A square wave
- C. A sawtooth wave
- D. A sine wave
-
- 4AH-7.11 Which sine waves make up a sawtooth wave?
- A. The fundamental frequency and all prime harmonics
- B. The fundamental frequency and all even harmonics
- C. The fundamental frequency and all odd harmonics
- D. The fundamental frequency and all harmonics
-
- 4AH-7.12 What type of wave is made up of sine waves at the
- fundamental frequency and all the harmonics?
- A. A sawtooth wave
- B. A square wave
- C. A sine wave
- D. A cosine wave
-
- 4AH-8.1 What is the meaning of the term ++++root mean square++++ value of
- an AC voltage?
- A. The value of an AC voltage found by squaring the average
- value of the peak AC voltage
- B. The value of a DC voltage that would cause the same heating
- effect in a given resistor as a peak AC voltage
- C. The value of an AC voltage that would cause the same
- heating effect in a given resistor as a DC voltage of the same
- value
- D. The value of an AC voltage found by taking the square root
- of the average AC value
-
- 4AH-8.2 What is the term used in reference to a DC voltage that
- would cause the same heating in a resistor as a certain value of
- AC voltage?
- A. Cosine voltage
- B. Power factor
- C. Root mean square
- D. Average voltage
-
- 4AH-8.3 What would be the most accurate way of determining the
- rms voltage of a complex waveform?
- A. By using a grid dip meter
- B. By measuring the voltage with a D'Arsonval meter
- C. By using an absorption wavemeter
- D. By measuring the heating effect in a known resistor
-
- 4AH-8.4 What is the rms voltage at a common household electrical
- power outlet?
- A. 117-V AC
- B. 331-V AC
- C. 82.7-V AC
- D. 165.5-V AC
-
- 4AH-8.5 What is the peak voltage at a common household electrical
- outlet?
- A. 234 volts
- B. 165.5 volts
- C. 117 volts
- D. 331 volts
-
- 4AH-8.6 What is the peak-to-peak voltage at a common household
- electrical outlet?
- A. 234 volts
- B. 117 volts
- C. 331 volts
- D. 165.5 volts
-
- 4AH-8.7 What is the rms voltage of a 165-volt peak pure sine
- wave?
- A. 233-V AC
- B. 330-V AC
- C. 58.3-V AC
- D. 117-V AC
-
- 4AH-8.8 What is the rms value of a 331-volt peak-to-peak pure
- sine wave?
- A. 117-V AC
- B. 165-V AC
- C. 234-V AC
- D. 300-V AC
-
- 4AH-9.1 For many types of voices, what is the ratio of PEP to
- average power during a modulation peak in a single-sideband phone
- signal?
- A. Approximately 1.0 to 1
- B. Approximately 25 to 1
- C. Approximately 2.5 to 1
- D. Approximately 100 to 1
-
- 4AH-9.2 In a single-sideband phone signal, what determines the
- PEP-to-average power ratio?
- A. The frequency of the modulating signal
- B. The degree of carrier suppression
- C. The speech characteristics
- D. The amplifier power
-
- 4AH-9.3 What is the approximate DC input power to a Class B RF
- power amplifier stage in an FM-phone transmitter when the PEP
- output power is 1500 watts?
- A. Approximately 900 watts
- B. Approximately 1765 watts
- C. Approximately 2500 watts
- D. Approximately 3000 watts
-
- 4AH-9.4 What is the approximate DC input power to a Class C RF
- power amplifier stage in a RTTY transmitter when the PEP output
- power is 1000 watts?
- A. Approximately 850 watts
- B. Approximately 1250 watts
- C. Approximately 1667 watts
- D. Approximately 2000 watts
-
- 4AH-9.5 What is the approximate DC input power to a Class AB RF
- power amplifier stage in an unmodulated carrier transmitter when
- the PEP output power is 500 watts?
- A. Approximately 250 watts
- B. Approximately 600 watts
- C. Approximately 800 watts
- D. Approximately 1000 watts
-
- 4AH-10.1 Where is the noise generated which primarily determines
- the signal-to-noise ratio in a 160-meter wavelength band
- receiver?
- A. In the detector
- B. Man-made noise
- C. In the receiver front end
- D. In the atmosphere
-
- 4AH-10.2 Where is the noise generated which primarily determines
- the signal-to-noise ratio in a 2-meter wavelength band receiver?
- A. In the receiver front end
- B. Man-made noise
- C. In the atmosphere
- D. In the ionosphere
-
- 4AH-10.3 Where is the noise generated which primarily determines
- the signal-to-noise ratio in a 1.25-meter wavelength band
- receiver?
- A. In the audio amplifier
- B. In the receiver front end
- C. In the ionosphere
- D. Man-made noise
-
- 4AH-10.4 Where is the noise generated which primarily determines
- the signal-to-noise ratio in a 0.70-meter wavelength band
- receiver?
- A. In the atmosphere
- B. In the ionosphere
- C. In the receiver front end
- D. Man-made noise
-
- 4AI-1.1 What is meant by the term ++++antenna gain++++?
- A. The numerical ratio relating the radiated signal strength
- of an antenna to that of another antenna
- B. The ratio of the signal in the forward direction to the
- signal in the back direction
- C. The ratio of the amount of power produced by the antenna
- compared to the output power of the transmitter
- D. The final amplifier gain minus the transmission line losses
- (including any phasing lines present)
-
- 4AI-1.2 What is the term for a numerical ratio which relates the
- performance of one antenna to that of another real or theoretical
- antenna?
- A. Effective radiated power
- B. Antenna gain
- C. Conversion gain
- D. Peak effective power
-
- 4AI-1.3 What is meant by the term ++++antenna bandwidth++++?
- A. Antenna length divided by the number of elements
- B. The frequency range over which an antenna can be expected
- to perform well
- C. The angle between the half-power radiation points
- D. The angle formed between two imaginary lines drawn through
- the ends of the elements
-
- 4AI-1.4 How can the approximate beamwidth of a rotatable beam
- antenna be determined?
- A. Note the two points where the signal strength of the
- antenna is down 3 dB from the maximum signal point and compute
- the angular difference
- B. Measure the ratio of the signal strengths of the radiated
- power lobes from the front and rear of the antenna
- C. Draw two imaginary lines through the ends of the elements
- and measure the angle between the lines
- D. Measure the ratio of the signal strengths of the radiated
- power lobes from the front and side of the antenna
-
- 4AI-2.1 What is a ++++trap antenna++++?
- A. An antenna for rejecting interfering signals
- B. A highly sensitive antenna with maximum gain in all
- directions
- C. An antenna capable of being used on more than one band
- because of the presence of parallel LC networks
- D. An antenna with a large capture area
-
- 4AI-2.2 What is an advantage of using a trap antenna?
- A. It has high directivity in the high-frequency amateur bands
- B. It has high gain
- C. It minimizes harmonic radiation
- D. It may be used for multiband operation
-
- 4AI-2.3 What is a disadvantage of using a trap antenna?
- A. It will radiate harmonics
- B. It can only be used for single band operation
- C. It is too sharply directional at the lower amateur
- frequencies
- D. It must be neutralized
-
- 4AI-2.4 What is the principle of a trap antenna?
- A. Beamwidth may be controlled by non-linear impedances
- B. The traps form a high impedance to isolate parts of the
- antenna
- C. The effective radiated power can be increased if the space
- around the antenna "sees" a high impedance
- D. The traps increase the antenna gain
-
- 4AI-3.1 What is a parasitic element of an antenna?
- A. An element polarized 90 degrees opposite the driven element
- B. An element dependent on the antenna structure for support
- C. An element that receives its excitation from mutual
- coupling rather than from a transmission line
- D. A transmission line that radiates radio-frequency energy
-
- 4AI-3.2 How does a parasitic element generate an electromagnetic
- field?
- A. By the RF current received from a connected transmission
- line
- B. By interacting with the earth's magnetic field
- C. By altering the phase of the current on the driven element
- D. By currents induced into the element from a surrounding
- electric field
-
- 4AI-3.3 How does the length of the reflector element of a
- parasitic element beam antenna compare with that of the driven
- element?
- A. It is about 5% longer
- B. It is about 5% shorter
- C. It is twice as long
- D. It is one-half as long
-
- 4AI-3.4 How does the length of the director element of a
- parasitic element beam antenna compare with that of the driven
- element?
- A. It is about 5% longer
- B. It is about 5% shorter
- C. It is one-half as long
- D. It is twice as long
-
- 4AI-4.1 What is meant by the term ++++radiation resistance++++ for an
- antenna?
- A. Losses in the antenna elements and feed line
- B. The specific impedance of the antenna
- C. An equivalent resistance that would dissipate the same
- amount of power as that radiated from an antenna
- D. The resistance in the trap coils to received signals
-
- 4AI-4.2 What is the term used for an equivalent resistance which
- would dissipate the same amount of energy as that radiated from
- an antenna?
- A. Space resistance
- B. Loss resistance
- C. Transmission line loss
- D. Radiation resistance
-
- 4AI-4.3 Why is the value of the radiation resistance of an
- antenna important?
- A. Knowing the radiation resistance makes it possible to match
- impedances for maximum power transfer
- B. Knowing the radiation resistance makes it possible to
- measure the near-field radiation density from a transmitting
- antenna
- C. The value of the radiation resistance represents the front-
- to-side ratio of the antenna
- D. The value of the radiation resistance represents the front-
- to-back ratio of the antenna
-
- 4AI-4.4 What are the factors that determine the radiation
- resistance of an antenna?
- A. Transmission line length and height of antenna
- B. The location of the antenna with respect to nearby objects
- and the length/diameter ratio of the conductors
- C. It is a constant for all antennas since it is a physical
- constant
- D. Sunspot activity and the time of day
-
- 4AI-5.1 What is a ++++driven element++++ of an antenna?
- A. Always the rearmost element
- B. Always the forwardmost element
- C. The element fed by the transmission line
- D. The element connected to the rotator
-
- 4AI-5.2 What is the usual electrical length of a driven element
- in an HF beam antenna?
- A. 1/4 wavelength
- B. 1/2 wavelength
- C. 3/4 wavelength
- D. 1 wavelength
-
- 4AI-5.3 What is the term for an antenna element which is supplied
- power from a transmitter through a transmission line?
- A. Driven element
- B. Director element
- C. Reflector element
- D. Parasitic element
-
- 4AI-6.1 What is meant by the term ++++antenna efficiency++++?
- A. Efficiency = (radiation resistance / transmission resistance) X 100%
- B. Efficiency = (radiation resistance / total resistance) X 100%
- C. Efficiency = (total resistance / radiation resistance) X 100%
- D. Efficiency = (effective radiated power / transmitter output) X 100%
-
- 4AI-6.2 What is the term for the ratio of the radiation
- resistance of an antenna to the total resistance of the system?
- A. Effective radiated power
- B. Radiation conversion loss
- C. Antenna efficiency
- D. Beamwidth
-
- 4AI-6.3 What is included in the total resistance of an antenna
- system?
- A. Radiation resistance plus space impedance
- B. Radiation resistance plus transmission resistance
- C. Transmission line resistance plus radiation resistance
- D. Radiation resistance plus ohmic resistance
-
- 4AI-6.4 How can the antenna efficiency of an HF grounded vertical
- antenna be made comparable to that of a half-wave antenna?
- A. By installing a good ground radial system
- B. By isolating the coax shield from ground
- C. By shortening the vertical
- D. By lengthening the vertical
-
- 4AI-6.5 Why does a half-wave antenna operate at very high
- efficiency?
- A. Because it is non-resonant
- B. Because the conductor resistance is low compared to the
- radiation resistance
- C. Because earth-induced currents add to its radiated power
- D. Because it has less corona from the element ends than other
- types of antennas
-
- 4AI-7.1 What is a ++++folded dipole++++ antenna?
- A. A dipole that is one-quarter wavelength long
- B. A ground plane antenna
- C. A dipole whose ends are connected by another one-half
- wavelength piece of wire
- D. A fictional antenna used in theoretical discussions to
- replace the radiation resistance
-
- 4AI-7.2 How does the bandwidth of a folded dipole antenna compare
- with that of a simple dipole antenna?
- A. It is 0.707 times the simple dipole bandwidth
- B. It is essentially the same
- C. It is less than 50% that of a simple dipole
- D. It is greater
-
- 4AI-7.3 What is the input terminal impedance at the center of a
- folded dipole antenna?
- A. 300 ohms
- B. 72 ohms
- C. 50 ohms
- D. 450 ohms
-
- 4AI-8.1 What is the meaning of the term ++++velocity factor++++ of a
- transmission line?
- A. The ratio of the characteristic impedance of the line to
- the terminating impedance
- B. The index of shielding for coaxial cable
- C. The velocity of the wave on the transmission line
- multiplied by the velocity of light in a vacuum
- D. The velocity of the wave on the transmission line divided
- by the velocity of light in a vacuum
-
- 4AI-8.2 What is the term for the ratio of actual velocity at
- which a signal travels through a line to the speed of light in a
- vacuum?
- A. Velocity factor
- B. Characteristic impedance
- C. Surge impedance
- D. Standing wave ratio
-
- 4AI-8.3 What is the velocity factor for a typical coaxial cable?
- A. 2.70
- B. 0.66
- C. 0.30
- D. 0.10
-
- 4AI-8.4 What determines the velocity factor in a transmission
- line?
- A. The termination impedance
- B. The line length
- C. Dielectrics in the line
- D. The center conductor resistivity
-
- 4AI-8.5 Why is the physical length of a coaxial cable
- transmission line shorter than its electrical length?
- A. Skin effect is less pronounced in the coaxial cable
- B. RF energy moves slower along the coaxial cable
- C. The surge impedance is higher in the parallel feed line
- D. The characteristic impedance is higher in the parallel feed
- line
-
- 4AI-9.1 What would be the physical length of a typical coaxial
- transmission line which is electrically one-quarter wavelength
- long at 14.1 MHz?
- A. 20 meters
- B. 3.51 meters
- C. 2.33 meters
- D. 0.25 meters
-
- 4AI-9.2 What would be the physical length of a typical coaxial
- transmission line which is electrically one-quarter wavelength
- long at 7.2 MHz?
- A. 10.5 meters
- B. 6.88 meters
- C. 24 meters
- D. 50 meters
-
- 4AI-9.3 What is the physical length of a parallel antenna
- feedline which is electrically one-half wavelength long at 14.10
- MHz? (assume a velocity factor of 0.82.)
- A. 15 meters
- B. 24.3 meters
- C. 8.7 meters
- D. 70.8 meters
-
- 4AI-9.4 What is the physical length of a twin lead transmission
- feedline at 3.65 MHz? (assume a velocity factor of 0.80.)
- A. Electrical length times 0.8
- B. Electrical length divided by 0.8
- C. 80 meters
- D. 160 meters
-
- 4AI-10.1 In a half-wave antenna, where are the current nodes?
- A. At the ends
- B. At the center
- C. Three-quarters of the way from the feed point toward the
- end
- D. One-half of the way from the feed point toward the end
-
- 4AI-10.2 In a half-wave antenna, where are the voltage nodes?
- A. At the ends
- B. At the feed point
- C. Three-quarters of the way from the feed point toward the
- end
- D. One-half of the way from the feed point toward the end
-
- 4AI-10.3 At the ends of a half-wave antenna, what values of
- current and voltage exist compared to the remainder of the
- antenna?
- A. Equal voltage and current
- B. Minimum voltage and maximum current
- C. Maximum voltage and minimum current
- D. Minimum voltage and minimum current
-
- 4AI-10.4 At the center of a half-wave antenna, what values of
- voltage and current exist compared to the remainder of the
- antenna?
- A. Equal voltage and current
- B. Maximum voltage and minimum current
- C. Minimum voltage and minimum current
- D. Minimum voltage and maximum current
-
- 4AI-11.1 Why is the inductance required for a base loaded HF
- mobile antenna less than that for an inductance placed further up
- the whip?
- A. The capacitance to ground is less farther away from the
- base
- B. The capacitance to ground is greater farther away from the
- base
- C. The current is greater at the top
- D. The voltage is less at the top
-
- 4AI-11.2 What happens to the base feed point of a fixed length HF
- mobile antenna as the frequency of operation is lowered?
- A. The resistance decreases and the capacitive reactance
- decreases
- B. The resistance decreases and the capacitive reactance
- increases
- C. The resistance increases and the capacitive reactance
- decreases
- D. The resistance increases and the capacitive reactance
- increases
-
- 4AI-11.3 Why should an HF mobile antenna loading coil have a high
- ratio of reactance to resistance?
- A. To swamp out harmonics
- B. To maximize losses
- C. To minimize losses
- D. To minimize the Q
-
- 4AI-11.4 Why is a loading coil often used with an HF mobile
- antenna?
- A. To improve reception
- B. To lower the losses
- C. To lower the Q
- D. To tune out the capacitive reactance
-
- 4AI-12.1 For a shortened vertical antenna, where should a loading
- coil be placed to minimize losses and produce the most effective
- performance?
- A. Near the center of the vertical radiator
- B. As low as possible on the vertical radiator
- C. As close to the transmitter as possible
- D. At a voltage node
-
- 4AI-12.2 What happens to the bandwidth of an antenna as it is
- shortened through the use of loading coils?
- A. It is increased
- B. It is decreased
- C. No change occurs
- D. It becomes flat
-
- 4AI-12.3 Why are self-resonant antennas popular in amateur
- stations?
- A. They are very broad banded
- B. They have high gain in all azimuthal directions
- C. They are the most efficient radiators
- D. They require no calculations
-
- 4AI-12.4 What is an advantage of using top loading in a shortened
- HF vertical antenna?
- A. Lower Q
- B. Greater structural strength
- C. Higher losses
- D. Improved radiation efficiency
-
-
-
-
- Answers
-
-
- 4AA-1.1 A
- 4AA-1.2 B
- 4AA-1.3 D
- 4AA-1.4 C
- 4AA-2.1 A
- 4AA-2.2 D
- 4AA-2.3 B
- 4AA-2.4 A
- 4AA-3.1 D
- 4AA-3.2 A
- 4AA-3.3 C
- 4AA-3.4 D
- 4AA-3.5 C
- 4AA-3.6 A
- 4AA-3.7 D
- 4AA-3.8 A
- 4AA-3.9 B
- 4AA-3.10 A
- 4AA-4.1 D
- 4AA-4.2 A
- 4AA-4.3 B
- 4AA-4.4 C
- 4AA-5.1 D
- 4AA-5.2 A
- 4AA-5.3 C
- 4AA-5.4 C
- 4AA-5.5 D
- 4AA-6.1 A
- 4AA-6.2 B
- 4AA-6.3 B
- 4AA-7.1 C
- 4AA-7.2 D
- 4AA-8.1 A
- 4AA-8.2 B
- 4AA-9.1 C
- 4AA-9.2 C
- 4AA-9.3 D
- 4AA-9.4 A
- 4AA-10.1 B
- 4AA-10.2 C
- 4AA-11.1 B
- 4AA-11.2 A
- 4AA-12.1 B
- 4AA-12.2 C
- 4AA-12.3 D
- 4AA-13.1 D
- 4AA-13.2 B
- 4AA-14.1 C
- 4AA-14.2 D
- 4AA-15.1 A
- 4AA-15.2 B
- 4AA-15.3 A
- 4AA-16.1 C
- 4AA-16.2 D
- 4AA-17.1 A
- 4AA-17.2 B
- 4AA-17.3 C
- 4AA-18.1 B
- 4AA-18.2 D
- 4AA-18.3 B
- 4AA-19.1 C
- 4AA-19.2 A
- 4AA-19.3 A
- 4AA-19.4 B
- 4AA-20.1 C
- 4AA-20.2 D
- 4AB-1.1 D
- 4AB-1.2 A
- 4AB-1.3 B
- 4AB-1.4 B
- 4AB-1.5 C
- 4AB-2.1 D
- 4AB-2.2 B
- 4AB-2.3 C
- 4AB-2.4 C
- 4AB-2.5 D
- 4AC-1.1 C
- 4AC-1.2 D
- 4AC-1.3 A
- 4AC-1.4 B
- 4AC-1.5 A
- 4AC-2.1 B
- 4AC-2.2 C
- 4AC-2.3 D
- 4AC-2.4 B
- 4AC-2.5 A
- 4AC-3.1 D
- 4AC-3.2 C
- 4AC-3.3 B
- 4AC-3.4 D
- 4AC-3.5 A
- 4AC-4.1 D
- 4AC-4.2 A
- 4AC-4.3 B
- 4AC-4.4 C
- 4AC-4.5 A
- 4AD-1.1 B
- 4AD-1.2 A
- 4AD-1.3 B
- 4AD-1.4 A
- 4AD-1.5 D
- 4AD-1.6 C
- 4AD-1.7 A
- 4AD-1.8 D
- 4AD-1.9 D
- 4AD-1.10 A
- 4AD-1.11 C
- 4AD-2.1 C
- 4AD-2.2 D
- 4AD-2.3 B
- 4AD-2.4 D
- 4AD-2.5 B
- 4AD-2.6 A
- 4AD-2.7 B
- 4AD-3.1 A
- 4AD-3.2 D
- 4AD-3.3 B
- 4AD-3.4 D
- 4AD-3.5 C
- 4AD-4.1 D
- 4AD-4.2 B
- 4AD-4.3 B
- 4AD-4.4 D
- 4AD-4.5 B
- 4AD-5.1 C
- 4AD-5.2 A
- 4AD-5.3 C
- 4AD-5.4 C
- 4AD-5.5 A
- 4AD-6.1 D
- 4AD-6.2 B
- 4AD-6.3 A
- 4AD-6.4 C
- 4AD-7.1 C
- 4AD-7.2 C
- 4AD-7.3 A
- 4AE-1.1 A
- 4AE-1.2 D
- 4AE-1.3 A
- 4AE-1.4 B
- 4AE-2.1 C
- 4AE-2.2 B
- 4AE-2.3 D
- 4AE-2.4 B
- 4AE-2.5 A
- 4AE-2.6 B
- 4AE-2.7 B
- 4AE-3.1 A
- 4AE-3.2 C
- 4AE-3.3 A
- 4AE-3.4 A
- 4AE-3.5 C
- 4AE-4.1 B
- 4AE-4.2 D
- 4AE-4.3 C
- 4AE-4.4 B
- 4AE-4.5 B
- 4AE-4.6 A
- 4AE-4.7 D
- 4AE-5.1 C
- 4AE-5.2 B
- 4AE-5.3 C
- 4AE-5.4 A
- 4AE-5.5 B
- 4AE-5.6 D
- 4AE-5.7 C
- 4AE-5.8 A
- 4AE-5.9 B
- 4AE-5.10 C
- 4AE-5.11 A
- 4AE-5.12 B
- 4AE-5.13 C
- 4AE-5.14 D
- 4AE-5.15 A
- 4AE-5.16 B
- 4AE-5.17 C
- 4AE-5.18 D
- 4AE-5.19 A
- 4AE-5.20 B
- 4AE-5.21 A
- 4AE-5.22 D
- 4AE-5.23 C
- 4AE-5.24 D
- 4AE-5.25 A
- 4AE-5.26 D
- 4AE-5.27 B
- 4AE-5.28 A
- 4AE-5.29 C
- 4AE-5.30 D
- 4AE-5.31 A
- 4AE-5.32 B
- 4AE-5.33 C
- 4AE-5.34 D
- 4AE-5.35 D
- 4AE-5.36 A
- 4AE-5.37 B
- 4AE-5.38 B
- 4AE-5.39 D
- 4AE-5.40 A
- 4AE-6.1 A
- 4AE-6.2 B
- 4AE-6.3 C
- 4AE-6.4 B
- 4AE-6.5 D
- 4AE-6.6 B
- 4AE-6.7 A
- 4AE-6.8 D
- 4AE-6.9 D
- 4AE-6.10 C
- 4AE-7.1 A
- 4AE-7.2 A
- 4AE-7.3 C
- 4AE-7.4 D
- 4AE-7.5 C
- 4AE-7.6 B
- 4AE-7.7 D
- 4AE-8.1 B
- 4AE-8.2 C
- 4AE-8.3 D
- 4AE-8.4 A
- 4AE-8.5 D
- 4AE-8.6 B
- 4AE-8.7 C
- 4AE-8.8 D
- 4AE-8.9 A
- 4AE-8.10 D
- 4AE-9.1 B
- 4AE-9.2 C
- 4AE-9.3 C
- 4AE-9.4 D
- 4AE-9.5 C
- 4AE-9.6 A
- 4AE-9.7 B
- 4AE-9.8 B
- 4AE-9.9 C
- 4AE-9.10 C
- 4AF-1.1 D
- 4AF-1.2 A
- 4AF-1.3 D
- 4AF-1.4 C
- 4AF-1.5 B
- 4AF-1.6 A
- 4AF-1.7 C
- 4AF-1.8 C
- 4AF-1.9 C
- 4AF-1.10 D
- 4AF-1.11 A
- 4AF-1.12 B
- 4AF-1.13 D
- 4AF-1.14 D
- 4AF-1.15 B
- 4AF-1.16 D
- 4AF-1.17 C
- 4AF-1.18 D
- 4AF-1.19 C
- 4AF-1.20 C
- 4AF-2.1 C
- 4AF-2.2 B
- 4AF-2.3 B
- 4AF-2.4 C
- 4AF-2.5 C
- 4AF-2.6 A
- 4AF-2.7 B
- 4AF-2.8 B
- 4AF-2.9 B
- 4AF-2.10 B
- 4AF-2.11 A
- 4AF-2.12 A
- 4AF-2.13 C
- 4AF-2.14 C
- 4AF-2.15 A
- 4AF-2.16 A
- 4AF-2.17 B
- 4AF-3.1 D
- 4AF-3.2 A
- 4AF-3.3 A
- 4AF-3.4 A
- 4AF-3.5 D
- 4AF-3.6 A
- 4AF-3.7 A
- 4AF-3.8 B
- 4AF-4.1 B
- 4AF-4.2 C
- 4AF-4.3 B
- 4AF-4.4 A
- 4AF-4.5 D
- 4AF-4.6 C
- 4AF-4.7 B
- 4AF-4.8 A
- 4AF-4.9 D
- 4AF-4.10 D
- 4AF-5.1 B
- 4AF-5.2 C
- 4AF-5.3 D
- 4AF-5.4 D
- 4AF-5.5 A
- 4AG-1.1 D
- 4AG-1.2 C
- 4AG-1.3 A
- 4AG-1.4 B
- 4AG-1.5 D
- 4AG-1.6 C
- 4AG-1.7 A
- 4AG-1.8 D
- 4AG-1.9 B
- 4AG-2.1 B
- 4AG-2.2 A
- 4AG-2.3 D
- 4AG-2.4 B
- 4AG-2.5 A
- 4AG-2.6 A
- 4AG-2.7 C
- 4AG-2.8 C
- 4AG-2.9 A
- 4AG-2.10 D
- 4AG-3.1 B
- 4AG-3.2 D
- 4AG-3.3 B
- 4AG-3.4 D
- 4AG-3.5 C
- 4AG-3.6 D
- 4AG-3.7 B
- 4AG-3.8 A
- 4AG-3.9 D
- 4AG-3.10 C
- 4AG-4.1 A
- 4AG-4.2 C
- 4AG-4.3 A
- 4AG-4.4 D
- 4AG-4.5 C
- 4AG-4.6 B
- 4AG-4.7 B
- 4AG-5.1 C
- 4AG-5.2 D
- 4AG-5.3 D
- 4AG-5.4 C
- 4AG-5.5 D
- 4AG-5.6 D
- 4AG-5.7 A
- 4AG-5.8 B
- 4AG-5.9 B
- 4AG-5.10 C
- 4AG-6.1 D
- 4AG-6.2 B
- 4AG-6.3 C
- 4AG-6.4 B
- 4AG-6.5 D
- 4AG-6.6 D
- 4AG-7.1 A
- 4AG-7.2 B
- 4AG-7.3 C
- 4AG-7.4 A
- 4AG-7.5 B
- 4AG-7.6 B
- 4AG-7.7 C
- 4AG-7.8 B
- 4AG-7.9 C
- 4AG-7.10 D
- 4AG-8.1 B
- 4AG-8.2 A
- 4AG-8.3 C
- 4AG-8.4 B
- 4AG-8.5 A
- 4AG-8.6 D
- 4AG-8.7 C
- 4AG-8.8 B
- 4AG-8.9 A
- 4AG-9.1 B
- 4AG-9.2 C
- 4AG-9.3 C
- 4AG-9.4 A
- 4AG-9.5 C
- 4AG-9.6 D
- 4AG-9.7 B
- 4AG-10.1 C
- 4AG-10.2 B
- 4AG-10.3 D
- 4AG-10.4 D
- 4AG-10.5 D
- 4AG-11.1 B
- 4AG-11.2 A
- 4AG-11.3 D
- 4AG-11.4 A
- 4AG-12.1 C
- 4AG-12.2 B
- 4AG-12.3 C
- 4AG-12.4 D
- 4AG-12.5 A
- 4AG-12.6 A
- 4AG-12.7 C
- 4AG-12.8 D
- 4AG-13.1 C
- 4AG-13.2 D
- 4AG-13.3 A
- 4AG-13.4 C
- 4AG-13.5 A
- 4AH-1.1 A
- 4AH-1.2 B
- 4AH-1.3 C
- 4AH-1.4 D
- 4AH-1.5 A
- 4AH-1.6 B
- 4AH-1.7 B
- 4AH-1.8 D
- 4AH-1.9 C
- 4AH-1.10 D
- 4AH-2.1 C
- 4AH-2.2 D
- 4AH-2.3 A
- 4AH-3.1 B
- 4AH-3.2 C
- 4AH-3.3 D
- 4AH-3.4 A
- 4AH-4.1 B
- 4AH-4.2 D
- 4AH-4.3 D
- 4AH-4.4 A
- 4AH-4.5 B
- 4AH-5.1 C
- 4AH-5.2 D
- 4AH-5.3 A
- 4AH-5.4 B
- 4AH-5.5 C
- 4AH-6.1 D
- 4AH-6.2 A
- 4AH-6.3 B
- 4AH-6.4 C
- 4AH-6.5 D
- 4AH-6.6 A
- 4AH-6.7 B
- 4AH-7.1 B
- 4AH-7.2 C
- 4AH-7.3 D
- 4AH-7.4 A
- 4AH-7.5 B
- 4AH-7.6 C
- 4AH-7.7 D
- 4AH-7.8 A
- 4AH-7.9 B
- 4AH-7.10 C
- 4AH-7.11 D
- 4AH-7.12 A
- 4AH-8.1 C
- 4AH-8.2 C
- 4AH-8.3 D
- 4AH-8.4 A
- 4AH-8.5 B
- 4AH-8.6 C
- 4AH-8.7 D
- 4AH-8.8 A
- 4AH-9.1 C
- 4AH-9.2 C
- 4AH-9.3 C
- 4AH-9.4 B
- 4AH-9.5 D
- 4AH-10.1 D
- 4AH-10.2 A
- 4AH-10.3 B
- 4AH-10.4 C
- 4AI-1.1 A
- 4AI-1.2 B
- 4AI-1.3 B
- 4AI-1.4 A
- 4AI-2.1 C
- 4AI-2.2 D
- 4AI-2.3 A
- 4AI-2.4 B
- 4AI-3.1 C
- 4AI-3.2 D
- 4AI-3.3 A
- 4AI-3.4 B
- 4AI-4.1 C
- 4AI-4.2 D
- 4AI-4.3 A
- 4AI-4.4 B
- 4AI-5.1 C
- 4AI-5.2 B
- 4AI-5.3 A
- 4AI-6.1 B
- 4AI-6.2 C
- 4AI-6.3 D
- 4AI-6.4 A
- 4AI-6.5 B
- 4AI-7.1 C
- 4AI-7.2 D
- 4AI-7.3 A
- 4AI-8.1 D
- 4AI-8.2 A
- 4AI-8.3 B
- 4AI-8.4 C
- 4AI-8.5 B
- 4AI-9.1 B
- 4AI-9.2 B
- 4AI-9.3 C
- 4AI-9.4 A
- 4AI-10.1 A
- 4AI-10.2 B
- 4AI-10.3 C
- 4AI-10.4 D
- 4AI-11.1 A
- 4AI-11.2 B
- 4AI-11.3 C
- 4AI-11.4 D
- 4AI-12.1 A
- 4AI-12.2 B
- 4AI-12.3 C
- 4AI-12.4 D
-