Washington Doubles and Triples CDL Practice Test

25 realistic Doubles and Triples practice questions for Washington CDL applicants. Required for: Drivers pulling more than one trailer. Official test: 20 questions, 16 correct to pass.

25Practice questions
20Questions on the official test
16 of 20Required to pass
Washington Department of LicensingTest administrator
Question 1 of 25 · Hazard Awareness

What is "blind spot" risk for doubles and triples?

  • A. It's minimal due to long mirrors
  • B. It's significant especially behind and to the right
  • C. It's only at night
  • D. It only affects single trailers
Question 2 of 25 · Coupling

Where should the heaviest trailer go in a doubles or triples set?

  • A. First (closest to the tractor)
  • B. Last (farthest from the tractor)
  • C. Anywhere
  • D. In the middle
Question 3 of 25 · Vehicle Dynamics

Doubles and triples have ____ rollover risk than single trailers.

  • A. Lower
  • B. Higher
  • C. The same
  • D. No rollover risk
Question 4 of 25 · Following Distance

What's the best way to manage following distance with doubles?

  • A. Maintain extra distance compared to single trailers
  • B. Same as single trailers
  • C. Less distance
  • D. No following distance needed
Question 5 of 25 · Lane Changes

What's the major risk when changing lanes with doubles or triples?

  • A. The rear trailer may not follow exactly
  • B. Other vehicles may not see the long combination
  • C. The trailer may swing out
  • D. All of the above
Question 6 of 25 · Cargo

What's the impact of overloading a trailer in a doubles set?

  • A. Increased rollover risk
  • B. Poor handling
  • C. Brake problems
  • D. All of the above
Question 7 of 25 · Following Distance

What's the safe way to handle a doubles in heavy traffic?

  • A. Maintain extra following distance and signal early
  • B. Speed up to keep with traffic
  • C. Use the shoulder
  • D. Drive aggressively
Question 8 of 25 · Coupling

What is the pintle hook?

  • A. A coupling device on the dolly that connects to the lead trailer's pintle plate
  • B. A type of tire
  • C. A safety chain
  • D. A brake component
Question 9 of 25 · Emergency Maneuvers

How should doubles drivers handle emergency braking?

  • A. Apply brakes firmly but smoothly
  • B. Use only the trailer hand valve
  • C. Pump the brakes
  • D. Use only the engine retarder
Question 10 of 25 · Coupling

What's the role of safety chains on a converter dolly?

  • A. To support the dolly when uncoupled
  • B. To prevent the trailer from coming loose if the pintle hook fails
  • C. To improve traction
  • D. To act as a brake
Question 11 of 25 · Inspection

Why must drivers inspect the dolly before connecting?

  • A. To check for damage and proper operation
  • B. To verify the brakes work
  • C. To inspect the pintle hook
  • D. All of the above
Question 12 of 25 · Combination Air

What's the role of glad hands in doubles and triples?

  • A. They connect air lines between each unit
  • B. They are coupling devices
  • C. They are safety chains
  • D. They are landing gear
Question 13 of 25 · Skids

What should you do if a trailer starts to skid?

  • A. Release the brakes to allow trailer wheels to roll
  • B. Apply more brake
  • C. Steer hard right
  • D. Accelerate
Question 14 of 25 · Vehicle Dynamics

When making a turn, the front trailer of a doubles set:

  • A. Tracks like a single trailer
  • B. Off-tracks more than the tractor
  • C. Stays in line with the tractor
  • D. Off-tracks less than the rear trailer
Question 15 of 25 · Vehicle Dynamics

How do you reduce off-tracking in doubles?

  • A. Make wider turns
  • B. Slow down
  • C. Use mirrors carefully
  • D. All of the above
Question 16 of 25 · CDL Rules

Triples are illegal in many states because:

  • A. They are too long and cause traffic disruption
  • B. They have higher rollover risk
  • C. They require special permits
  • D. All of the above
Question 17 of 25 · Communication

How can drivers communicate effectively when driving doubles?

  • A. Use turn signals well in advance
  • B. Use mirrors continuously
  • C. Use the horn when needed
  • D. All of the above
Question 18 of 25 · Coupling

What is the converter dolly?

  • A. A type of tractor
  • B. A coupling device used between trailers in doubles and triples
  • C. A trailer brake
  • D. A type of cargo
Question 19 of 25 · Speed Management

How should drivers approach a sharp curve with doubles?

  • A. Slow down well before the curve and steer smoothly
  • B. Maintain highway speed
  • C. Use engine retarder
  • D. Brake hard in the curve
Question 20 of 25 · Inspection

When inspecting doubles and triples, what should you check?

  • A. Each trailer's lights and brakes
  • B. Each converter dolly
  • C. Each fifth wheel and pintle hook
  • D. All of the above
Question 21 of 25 · Coupling

How do you prevent a trailer from rolling away when uncoupled?

  • A. Apply trailer brakes and chock the wheels
  • B. Use the parking brake on the tractor
  • C. Lower the landing gear quickly
  • D. Drive away quickly
Question 22 of 25 · Coupling

What's the proper procedure for coupling a second trailer?

  • A. Position the dolly under the second trailer, then back the lead trailer to the dolly
  • B. Drive the lead trailer over the dolly
  • C. Connect electrical first
  • D. Lower the landing gear
Question 23 of 25 · Coupling

How should you uncouple a converter dolly?

  • A. Lower the dolly support, disconnect, and pull the tractor and first trailer away
  • B. Disconnect and drive away
  • C. Use the trailer parking brake
  • D. Cut the air lines
Question 24 of 25 · Mountain Driving

What's the recommended speed when descending a steep grade with doubles?

  • A. Slow speed using lower gears and engine braking
  • B. Posted speed limit
  • C. Faster than single trailers
  • D. Use service brakes only
Question 25 of 25 · Vehicle Dynamics

What's the importance of "leverage" in doubles and triples?

  • A. Each trailer affects the others; the rear can amplify or reduce stability
  • B. It only affects fuel efficiency
  • C. It doesn't matter
  • D. It only affects loading
Back to Washington

About the Doubles and Triples Test

The Doubles and Triples test covers pulling double and triple trailers, coupling and uncoupling, inspecting doubles and triples, antilock brake systems, and safe driving with multiple trailers. Doubles and triples are more likely to roll over than single trailers and are extremely sensitive to steering inputs at the rear trailer.

The Washington Department of Licensing administers this knowledge test as part of its commercial driver license program. To earn the Doubles/Triples (T) on your Washington 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 Washington until you're ready for the official exam.

Tips specific to the Doubles and Triples test

Doubles and Triples questions emphasize the "crack-the-whip" effect, converter dolly inspection and use, pintle hooks, safety chains, the heaviest-trailer-first loading rule, and the higher rollover risk of multi-trailer combinations. Many states prohibit triples; check local rules.

Other practice tests for Washington