New York Air Brakes CDL Practice Test

25 realistic Air Brakes practice questions for New York CDL applicants. Required for: Vehicles equipped with air brake systems. Official test: 25 questions, 20 correct to pass.

25Practice questions
25Questions on the official test
20 of 25Required to pass
New York State Department of Motor VehiclesTest administrator
Question 1 of 25 · System Basics

Air brakes use compressed air to:

  • A. Lubricate the wheels
  • B. Make the brakes work
  • C. Cool the engine
  • D. Increase fuel pressure
Question 2 of 25 · Compressor

Brake-system air pressure should build from 85 to 100 psi within:

  • A. 15 seconds in dual systems
  • B. 30 seconds in dual systems
  • C. 45 seconds in dual systems
  • D. 60 seconds in dual systems
Question 3 of 25 · Operation

When the brake pedal is pushed harder, what happens?

  • A. Brake pedal must be pumped to release
  • B. More air goes to the brakes; less foot pressure releases air
  • C. It locks the brakes permanently
  • D. The brakes do not respond
Question 4 of 25 · Inspection

How much air pressure (psi) loss is allowed per minute for single vehicles with the engine off and brakes released?

  • A. Up to 1 psi
  • B. Up to 2 psi
  • C. Up to 3 psi
  • D. Up to 4 psi
Question 5 of 25 · Spring Brakes

Spring brakes:

  • A. Are released by air pressure
  • B. Are applied by air pressure
  • C. Should be tested by pumping the brake pedal
  • D. Are only on the trailer
Question 6 of 25 · Tanks

When should you drain the air tanks?

  • A. Once a week
  • B. Only when the warning light is on
  • C. At the end of each working day
  • D. Once a month
Question 7 of 25 · Inspection

How do you test the low pressure warning signal?

  • A. With the engine off, pump the brake pedal until the signal activates (must come on at 60 psi or above)
  • B. Drive the vehicle to lose pressure
  • C. Open the air tank drain valve briefly
  • D. Push the parking brake control
Question 8 of 25 · Inspection

When should you push the brake pedal during the air brake test?

  • A. Only when the engine is running
  • B. When checking the compressor
  • C. When the engine is off, to check that pressure does not drop too quickly
  • D. During the brake light test only
Question 9 of 25 · System Basics

Which of these is NOT a part of the basic air brake system?

  • A. Air compressor
  • B. Air storage tanks
  • C. Hydraulic master cylinder
  • D. Foot brake valve
Question 10 of 25 · Spring Brakes

Spring brakes will come on automatically when air pressure drops to:

  • A. 100 psi
  • B. 60 psi or less
  • C. 20 to 45 psi
  • D. 10 psi
Question 11 of 25 · Parking

You should never use the trailer hand valve to park because:

  • A. It is not strong enough
  • B. The air could leak out, releasing the brakes
  • C. It only applies the front brakes
  • D. It is not connected to the trailer
Question 12 of 25 · Spring Brakes

Where are spring brakes typically NOT found?

  • A. Front steering axle
  • B. Drive axles
  • C. Trailer axles
  • D. Tractor rear axles
Question 13 of 25 · Operation

When making a normal stop, what should you do?

  • A. Push the brake pedal down so you can stop at a safe place and remain in control
  • B. Pump the brakes
  • C. Use only the parking brake
  • D. Use only the trailer hand valve
Question 14 of 25 · Speed Management

Why is it important not to over-apply the brakes?

  • A. Brakes can overheat and fade
  • B. Brakes will lock and skid
  • C. You may lose control of the vehicle
  • D. All of the above
Question 15 of 25 · Speed Management

Air brake lag is:

  • A. The time required for the brakes to apply after the pedal is pressed
  • B. The amount of free play in the brake pedal
  • C. The distance traveled before the brakes release
  • D. The time to drain air tanks
Question 16 of 25 · Bobtail

What is bobtail braking?

  • A. Braking with no trailer attached, when the tractor brakes harder than usual
  • B. A type of trailer-only braking
  • C. Emergency braking on doubles
  • D. A way to test the parking brake
Question 17 of 25 · Tanks

Why must air tanks be drained?

  • A. To remove fuel from the system
  • B. To remove water and compressor oil that can damage the brakes
  • C. To inspect the tanks
  • D. To increase pressure
Question 18 of 25 · ABS

What is the proper procedure for an air brake stop in a vehicle equipped with ABS?

  • A. Pump the brakes
  • B. Press the brake pedal firmly and steadily; let ABS work
  • C. Disengage ABS first
  • D. Apply the parking brake
Question 19 of 25 · Speed Management

Air brake lag distance at 55 mph on dry pavement adds about:

  • A. 12 feet to stopping distance
  • B. 32 feet to stopping distance
  • C. 50 feet to stopping distance
  • D. 100 feet to stopping distance
Question 20 of 25 · Emergency Maneuvers

Stab braking includes which of these steps?

  • A. Apply brakes fully, release when wheels lock, reapply when wheels begin rolling
  • B. Apply brakes lightly until they fade
  • C. Pump the brakes rapidly
  • D. Apply the parking brake repeatedly
Question 21 of 25 · Inspection

How do you know that you have an air leak?

  • A. Pressure drops faster than allowable rate
  • B. You hear hissing
  • C. Both A and B
  • D. The brake pedal feels firm
Question 22 of 25 · Inspection

When should you check the parking brake?

  • A. Whenever you start a trip
  • B. Once a month
  • C. Only at inspections
  • D. When the brake warning light is on
Question 23 of 25 · Gauges

The supply pressure gauge tells you:

  • A. The pressure of brake fluid
  • B. How much air pressure is in the air tanks
  • C. The trailer brake pressure
  • D. The temperature of the brake
Question 24 of 25 · Gauges

You should know your vehicle is properly equipped with which gauge?

  • A. Two air pressure gauges (or one with two needles) showing pressure in primary and secondary tanks
  • B. A vacuum gauge
  • C. A voltage meter only
  • D. A coolant gauge only
Question 25 of 25 · Inspection

What is the air loss rate for combination vehicles with brakes applied?

  • A. 1 psi per minute
  • B. 2 psi per minute
  • C. 3 psi per minute
  • D. 4 psi per minute
Back to New York

About the Air Brakes Test

The Air Brakes test covers air brake system parts (compressor, governor, reservoirs, drain valves, alcohol evaporator, safety valve, brake pedal, foundation brakes), dual air brake systems, inspecting air brakes, using air brakes (normal stops, emergency stops, parking brakes), and proper procedures for braking on downgrades. If you fail or skip the Air Brakes test, your CDL is restricted to vehicles without full air brake systems.

The New York State Department of Motor Vehicles administers this knowledge test as part of its commercial driver license program. To earn the Air Brakes Endorsement on your New York CDL, you need to score at least 20 out of 25 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 New York until you're ready for the official exam.

Tips specific to the Air Brakes test

Air Brakes questions test your ability to identify components, follow inspection sequences, and respond to system failures. Memorize the cut-in and cut-out pressures, the low-pressure warning thresholds, the pressure ranges at which spring brakes apply, and the maximum allowable air-loss rates. Many questions have nearly-identical wording, so precision matters.

Other practice tests for New York