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Test your basic knowledge |
Bridge Design
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
engineering
Instructions:
Answer 47 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. The stress a bridge must carry in the form of cars - trucks - people - trains - etc. This weight or load is constantly changing. Hopefully a bridge will carry MANY times it's own weight.
Truss Bridge
Rocker Bearing
Live Load
Truss
2. A structure that allows people or vehicles to cross an obstacle such as a river or canal or railway etc.
Base
Bridge
Abutment
H member
3. The weight of all columns - beams - floors - roadways - arches - and other components of a bridge. The weight of the bridge itself.
Dead Load
Shear
Pile
H member
4. A structural steel shape - such as an angle - that is attached to a flat plate such as a gusset plate or the web of a member to add compression strength
Bridge
Torsion
Stiffener
Fatigue
5. A welded truss perpendicular to the main trusses - used to support the deck
Compression
Web
Floor Truss
Upper Chord
6. A bridge bearing comprising of a single roller or a group of rollers housed so as to permit longitun=dinal expansion or contraction
Roller Bearing
Rocker Bearing
Superstructure
Member
7. A bridge status assigned by the FHA under the National Bridge Inspection Standards. This type of bridge was built to the standards of the day but are not used today. These bridges are not considered inherently unsafe - but they may have lane widths -
Counter brace
Pier
Functionally Obsolete
Base
8. A structural steel member with two flat flanges separated by a horizontal steel plate (web) to form an 'H'
Span
H member
Superstructure
Substructure
9. Frameworks of beams or girders used for support. A truss can be metal (steel) or of wooden construction.
Tension Member
Fracture-Critical Member
Girder
Truss
10. The top horizontal member of a truss. the upper chord extends the length of the deck truss but it is made uyp of shorter chord memebers joined at nodes.
Truss
Upper Chord
Fracture-Critical Member
Roller Bearing
11. In metal - a brittle cracking mechanism caused by repitive loading over time
Substructure
Dead Load
Fatigue
Rivet
12. A heavy column of wood - steel - or reinforced concrete sunk vertically into a stream or riverbed to support a bridge (also commonly used for docks and wharves). When the stream or river is not stabe (soft silt or mud) pilings or groups of piles are
Pile
Fatigue
Superstructure
Yield Stress
13. A retaining wall that supports the ends of a bridge. It may be built of stone - bedrock - wood - iron - or concrete.
Tension
Base
Abutment
H member
14. The bridge structure that supports the superstructure and transfers loads from it to the ground or bedrock. the main components are abutments - piers - footings - and pilings.
Span
Live Load
Upper Chord
Substructure
15. A structural member connecting the upper and lower chords on the diagonal (as opposed to the vertical).
Diaphram
Fracture-Critical Member
Yield Stress
Diagonal
16. The stress above which permanent (plastic) deformation occurs
Truss
Yield Stress
Splice Plate
Cantilever
17. A force that pushes or presses toward the center of an object or from the ends toward the middle of a structural member. Compression shortens the material. It is the opposite of tension.
Substructure
Cantilever
Node
Compression
18. A force that stretches or pulls on a material. Tension lengthens a material - any material.
Gusset Plate
Roller Bearing
Tension
Web
19. A metal fastener
Compression Member
Base
Rivet
Floor Truss
20. A steel member within a non - load- path- redundnat structure - the failure of which would cause a partial or total collapse of the structure
Rivet
Live Load
Fracture-Critical Member
Node
21. Bracing that spans between the main beams or girders of a bridge and assists in the distribution on loads
Web
Live Load
Lower Chord
Diaphram
22. The vertical or upright supports.
Diaphram
Truss
Post
Fracture-Critical Member
23. A drain - pipe - or channel that allows water to pass under a road - railroad - or embankment.
Culvert
Truss
Yield Stress
Superstructure
24. A plate that joins two chord members of a truss of that is used to extend the length of a member
Splice Plate
Fatigue
Compression
Compression Member
25. A metal plate used to unite multiple structural members of a truss
Gusset Plate
Torsion
Counter brace
Stringer
26. The horizontal space between two supports of a structure
Abutment
Dead Load
Span
Truss Bridge
27. Any member of a truss that is subjected to tensile forces
Truss Bridge
Floor Truss
Tension Member
Culvert
28. A device located between the bridge structure and a supporting pier or abutment
H member
Bearing
Stiffener
Web
29. A connecting point where the upper and lower chords were joined
Span
Diagonal
Stringer
Node
30. A bridge typically composed of straight structural elements connected to form triangles.
Compression
Roller Bearing
Truss Bridge
Diagonal
31. The bottom horizontal member of a truss. It extends the length of the deck truss but consists of shorter chord members spliced together
Stiffener
Roller Bearing
Lower Chord
Yield Stress
32. The vertical portion of an 'I' beam or girder
Splice Plate
Web
Member
Truss
33. A beam aligned with the length of a span that supports the deck
Gusset Plate
Stringer
Base
Cantilever
34. The vertical member connecting the upper and lower chords at the like- numbered nodes.
Stringer
Vertical
Member
Diagonal
35. An individual angle - beam - plate - or built- up piece intended to become an integral part of an assembled frame or structure
Roller Bearing
Member
Upper Chord
Cantilever
36. A basic underlying element- infrastructure. The bottom or lowest part of a structure.
Base
Tension
Rocker Bearing
Truss
37. A truss member that is subjected to compressive forces.
Torsion
Yield Stress
Compression Member
Member
38. Act of twisting; twisting of a body by two opposing forces
H member
Splice Plate
Upper Chord
Torsion
39. In a bridge truss - a diagonal timber or support that slants away from the midpoint of the bridge.
Torsion
Gusset Plate
Counter brace
Splice Plate
40. A force that causes part of a material to slide past one another in opposite direction
Tension Member
Shear
Span
Floor Truss
41. Horizontal timbers or support at top and bottom between which vertical posts and diagonal braces are attached. (counter braces)
Chord
Fracture-Critical Member
Roller Bearing
Diagonal
42. A loss of metal usually resulting from corrosion - that reduces the thickness of a steel bridge component
Section Loss
Diagonal
Tension Member
Girder
43. A structural member that projects beyond a supporting column or wall and is supported only at one end.
Shear
Cantilever
Substructure
Roller Bearing
44. A vertical structure that supports the ends of a multispan superstructure at a location between abutments
Pier
Truss
Dead Load
Upper Chord
45. A horizontal structural member supporting verticle loads by bending
Floor Truss
Abutment
Section Loss
Girder
46. A bridge support bearing that accommodates thermal expansion and contraction of the superstructure through a rocking action
Truss
Rocker Bearing
Gusset Plate
Bearing
47. The bridge structure that receives and supports traffic loads and in turn transfers those loads to the substructure.
Fracture-Critical Member
Superstructure
Tension
Node