Kentucky Combination Vehicles CDL Practice Test

25 realistic Combination Vehicles practice questions for Kentucky CDL applicants. Required for: Class A CDL (tractor-trailer combinations). Official test: 20 questions, 16 correct to pass.

25Practice questions
20Questions on the official test
16 of 20Required to pass
Kentucky Division of Driver LicensingTest administrator
Question 1 of 25 · Following Distance

How can you reduce risk of rear-end collisions?

  • A. Maintain safe following distances and watch for slowing traffic
  • B. Drive at the speed limit always
  • C. Use mirrors only at night
  • D. Avoid signaling
Question 2 of 25 · Skids

What should you do to recover from a trailer skid?

  • A. Apply more brake pressure
  • B. Release the brakes to allow trailer wheels to roll again
  • C. Steer hard right
  • D. Accelerate forward
Question 3 of 25 · Coupling

What are landing gear used for?

  • A. Supporting the front of the trailer when uncoupled
  • B. Steering the trailer
  • C. Powering the trailer brakes
  • D. Lighting the trailer
Question 4 of 25 · Inspection

When should you check trailer brakes during operation?

  • A. First few miles after coupling
  • B. Every fuel stop
  • C. Just at the end of the trip
  • D. Never during the trip
Question 5 of 25 · Mountain Driving

When should you use lower gears?

  • A. On steep upgrades and downgrades
  • B. In flat terrain
  • C. In stop-and-go traffic only
  • D. Never in a combination vehicle
Question 6 of 25 · Vehicle Dynamics

Empty trucks have what kind of stopping distance compared to fully loaded ones?

  • A. Shorter
  • B. Same
  • C. Longer
  • D. Half
Question 7 of 25 · Inspection

Which is true about gladhand seals?

  • A. They should be replaced if cracked or damaged
  • B. They never need replacement
  • C. They are the same as electrical connections
  • D. They are always made of metal
Question 8 of 25 · Vehicle Dynamics

Which of these is true about the front trailer of a doubles or triples?

  • A. It is less likely to overturn
  • B. It is more stable
  • C. It is more likely to overturn than the rear trailer
  • D. It does not need brakes
Question 9 of 25 · Skids

Which is the most common cause of trailer skid?

  • A. Driving too fast for conditions
  • B. Locking the rear trailer wheels by overbraking
  • C. Worn brake shoes
  • D. Too much trailer weight
Question 10 of 25 · Coupling

When uncoupling, what is the final step?

  • A. Lower the landing gear and disconnect electrical cord and air lines
  • B. Drive forward immediately
  • C. Set the parking brake on the tractor only
  • D. Engage the trailer brakes only
Question 11 of 25 · Vehicle Dynamics

What's the safest way to handle a tight turn with a long combination?

  • A. Take it wide using both lanes if necessary
  • B. Drive as fast as possible to maintain momentum
  • C. Use the trailer hand valve
  • D. Make a tight turn
Question 12 of 25 · Skids

What can cause a trailer skid in a combination vehicle?

  • A. Locked trailer wheels and over-application of brakes
  • B. Light loads on the trailer
  • C. Tight steering at low speed
  • D. High pressure in steering tires
Question 13 of 25 · Coupling

What is the proper position for the fifth wheel?

  • A. Tilted down toward the rear of the tractor with jaws open
  • B. Pointed straight up
  • C. Locked and ready
  • D. Removed for inspection
Question 14 of 25 · Combination Air

Trailer hand valve is used to:

  • A. Test trailer brakes
  • B. Park the trailer
  • C. Bypass the foot valve
  • D. Drain trailer tanks
Question 15 of 25 · Coupling

You should NEVER:

  • A. Back under a trailer at an angle
  • B. Inspect the fifth wheel
  • C. Use the parking brake
  • D. Tug-test the kingpin
Question 16 of 25 · Coupling

When you finish coupling, the air lines should be:

  • A. Connected to the proper glad hands and supported off the catwalk and the deck plate
  • B. Coiled tightly on top of the trailer
  • C. Loose so they can move freely
  • D. Disconnected
Question 17 of 25 · Inspection

What is the proper way to test the parking brakes after coupling?

  • A. Apply trailer parking brake and try to gently pull forward
  • B. Drive at normal speed
  • C. Apply foot brake repeatedly
  • D. Disconnect glad hands
Question 18 of 25 · Cargo

What can cause a high center of gravity?

  • A. Loading cargo too low
  • B. Loading cargo too high or unevenly
  • C. Driving too slowly
  • D. Empty trailers
Question 19 of 25 · Cargo

Why is securement of cargo essential?

  • A. To prevent the load from shifting
  • B. To prevent injury to others
  • C. To prevent damage to the vehicle
  • D. All of the above
Question 20 of 25 · Coupling

What should you do before connecting air lines?

  • A. Clean the rubber seals on the glad hands
  • B. Lubricate them with oil
  • C. Replace the seals every trip
  • D. Heat them up
Question 21 of 25 · Speed Management

What is the most common cause of fatal crashes for combination vehicles?

  • A. Loss of control due to speed too fast for conditions
  • B. Engine failure
  • C. Tire blowouts
  • D. Mechanical defects only
Question 22 of 25 · Vehicle Dynamics

Why should you avoid sudden steering and braking with combinations?

  • A. It wears tires faster
  • B. It can cause jackknife or rollover
  • C. It uses more fuel
  • D. It scares passengers
Question 23 of 25 · Skids

What is the result of a "trailer jackknife"?

  • A. Trailer continues straight ahead
  • B. Trailer swings out and tractor pivots
  • C. Trailer comes to a quick safe stop
  • D. Trailer disengages
Question 24 of 25 · Combination Air

When the trailer breaks away or loses air pressure, the trailer brakes should:

  • A. Release
  • B. Apply automatically
  • C. Vibrate
  • D. Disengage
Question 25 of 25 · Coupling

Before backing under a trailer, you should:

  • A. Make sure the trailer brakes are set and the trailer is at the correct height
  • B. Disconnect the air lines
  • C. Lower the landing gear
  • D. Engage the parking brake
Back to Kentucky

About the Combination Vehicles Test

The Combination Vehicles test covers driving combination vehicles safely, combination vehicle air brakes, antilock brake systems, coupling and uncoupling, and inspecting a combination vehicle. Combination vehicles are usually heavier, longer, and require more driving skill than single commercial vehicles. They are also more likely to roll over and jackknife.

The Kentucky Division of Driver Licensing administers this knowledge test as part of its commercial driver license program. To earn the Combination Vehicles on your Kentucky CDL, you need to score at least 16 out of 20 on the official version.

Topics covered on this practice test

How to use this practice test

  1. Read each question carefully. CDL questions are written precisely — small wording differences matter.
  2. Click "Show Answers & Explanations" only after answering every question. Don't peek mid-test.
  3. Read the explanation for every question, even ones you got right. The reasoning is more important than the answer.
  4. Repeat the test until you score 100%. The questions are deterministic per state, so you can track your improvement over multiple sessions.
  5. Move on to the other endorsement tests for Kentucky until you're ready for the official exam.

Tips specific to the Combination Vehicles test

Combination Vehicles questions cover off-tracking, jackknifing, coupling and uncoupling, the fifth wheel, kingpin, glad hands, landing gear, and the special air-brake considerations for tractor-trailer combinations. Expect detailed step-by-step coupling questions.

Other practice tests for Kentucky