Louisiana Air Brakes CDL Practice Test

This is a free 20-question practice test for the Air Brakes portion of the Louisiana Commercial Driver's License knowledge exam. Questions are pulled from a pool of 71 drawn from the AAMVA CDL Manual, which is the source document the Louisiana Office of Motor Vehicles uses to write its actual exam.

How it works: Click an answer. The correct choice highlights in green, and you'll see a short explanation. Aim for 85% or better before you sit for the real test in Louisiana.
Question 1 of 20
Total stopping distance with air brakes equals:
Correct. Add brake-lag distance to the standard perception + reaction + braking distance for any vehicle with air brakes.
Question 2 of 20
The spring brakes:
Correct. Spring brakes use heavy springs that apply the brake when air pressure is released or drops below 20-45 psi — they serve as both parking and emergency brake.
Question 3 of 20
The S-cam:
Correct. When the foot valve is pressed, air pushes the brake-chamber pushrod, which moves the slack adjuster, which rotates the S-cam shaft, forcing the shoes against the drum.
Question 4 of 20
When you make a normal stop with air brakes, you should:
Correct. For normal stops, apply steady firm pressure on the foot valve and adjust to maintain a smooth stop.
Question 5 of 20
You hear a steady "ssss" sound while parked with the engine off. This is most likely:
Correct. A steady hiss with the engine off indicates an air leak — find and repair before driving.
Question 6 of 20
The trailer air-supply control:
Correct. The trailer air-supply (tractor protection) is a red eight-sided knob. Push in to supply air to the trailer; pull out to shut off air.
Question 7 of 20
On a vehicle with ABS, in an emergency stop you should:
Correct. ABS lets you brake hard and continue steering. Brake firmly and avoid pumping — pumping defeats the system.
Question 8 of 20
A long downgrade requires:
Correct. Pick a low gear before starting down. Use the brakes in firm, intermittent applications: brake to 5 mph below safe speed, release, repeat.
Question 9 of 20
When releasing brakes after a hard stop, you should:
Correct. Release the brakes smoothly. Air tanks refill while you drive; allow the compressor to recharge the system before the next braking event.
Question 10 of 20
A low-air-pressure warning device must come on at or before:
Correct. A federal-mandated low-air-pressure warning (light, buzzer, or wig-wag) must activate at or before 60 psi.
Question 11 of 20
For a single vehicle with engine off and brakes applied, the maximum allowable air-loss rate is:
Correct. A single vehicle is allowed no more than 3 psi/min with brakes fully applied.
Question 12 of 20
In a dual air-brake system, you should let the air pressure build to at least what level before driving?
Correct. Wait until the system pressure is at least 100 psi before driving in a dual air-brake system.
Question 13 of 20
In a dual air-brake system, the time required for air pressure to build from 85 to 100 psi should be no more than:
Correct. In dual air-brake systems, air should build from 85 to 100 psi within 45 seconds at engine governed RPM.
Question 14 of 20
Brake fade is the result of:
Correct. Brake fade comes from heat. Manage downgrade speed by gear selection plus intermittent firm brake use, not continuous light pressure.
Question 15 of 20
You should perform a static air-leakage test by:
Correct. Engine off, brakes released, fully charged system: watch for air loss over one minute. Then apply brakes and check again.
Question 16 of 20
When the spring brakes apply automatically as air pressure drops, this typically happens between:
Correct. Spring brakes will fully apply somewhere between 20 and 45 psi as system pressure drops, depending on the vehicle.
Question 17 of 20
In a fully charged dual air-brake system at idle, you should test the low-pressure warning by:
Correct. Engine off, fan the brake pedal to bleed pressure. The low-pressure warning device should activate before pressure drops below 60 psi.
Question 18 of 20
Air brakes take longer to work than hydraulic brakes because:
Correct. Brake-lag in air systems comes from the time air takes to travel through lines and reach all the brake chambers — typically 0.4 seconds added to perception/reaction time.
Question 19 of 20
When checking the brakes on a downgrade, you should:
Correct. Watch the air-pressure gauge. If pressure drops faster than the compressor can recover, brakes are being used too aggressively for the gear selection.
Question 20 of 20
The brake-system warning light or buzzer is designed to alert you when:
Correct. The brake-system warning device alerts you to dangerous low air pressure — typically activating at or before 60 psi.

About the Louisiana Air Brakes exam

States typically administer 25 Air Brakes questions and require 80% to pass. Questions cover air-brake system parts, dual systems, supply pressure, brake-system warning, slack adjusters, the parking brake, the spring brake, the pre-trip air-system check, and the proper way to perform a leakage-rate test.

The Louisiana Office of Motor Vehicles follows the federal CDL standards established by FMCSA. To earn the Air Brakes credential, you must answer at least 80% of the questions correctly. Many candidates score lower the first time because the test pulls from a large pool — refreshing this page will give you a different mix of questions, drawn from the same authoritative source.

Want more practice? Try the full Air Brakes question bank or browse all Louisiana CDL practice tests.