Vermont Combination Vehicles CDL Practice Test
This is a free 20-question practice test for the Combination Vehicles portion of the Vermont Commercial Driver's License knowledge exam. Questions are pulled from a pool of 55 drawn from the AAMVA CDL Manual, which is the source document the Vermont Department 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 Vermont.
Question 1 of 20
Front-trailer (lead) wheels lock and the trailer behind continues forward — this is:
Correct. When the trailer wheels lose traction and the front-of-trailer pivots while the tractor continues forward, the result is a trailer jackknife.
Question 2 of 20
During a pre-trip inspection, you should also check that the cargo:
Correct. Cargo securement, weight balance, and size compliance are all driver responsibilities — check before each trip.
Question 3 of 20
Combination vehicles are usually:
Correct. Combination vehicles (tractor-trailer rigs) are heavier, longer, and articulate at the fifth wheel — all making them more demanding than single-unit trucks.
Question 4 of 20
Most jackknifes happen because:
Correct. Loss of traction on the tractor drive axles during braking — typically on slick surfaces or with overly aggressive braking — causes a jackknife.
Question 5 of 20
When backing a tractor-trailer in a straight line, you should:
Correct. When backing straight, watch the trailer in your mirrors and make small steering corrections to keep it tracking straight. Big corrections lead to jackknifing.
Question 6 of 20
When approaching a curve in a tractor-trailer, you should:
Correct. Slow before entering the curve. Once in the curve, accelerate gently to maintain stability. Braking in a curve invites trailer skid or rollover.
Question 7 of 20
The trailer hand valve should be used:
Correct. Use the trailer hand valve only for testing trailer brakes. Using it to slow the rig can cause the trailer to skid or jackknife.
Question 8 of 20
When you connect the glad-hands, you should:
Correct. Push the glad-hands together so the rubber seals match, then rotate to lock. Be sure red goes to red and blue goes to blue (the lines themselves often cross to keep colors matched).
Question 9 of 20
When you are backing a trailer to the right, you should turn the steering wheel:
Correct. When backing, the trailer goes opposite to the way you initially turn the steering wheel. To make the trailer go right (passenger side), start by turning the wheel left.
Question 10 of 20
When you check the fifth wheel during pre-trip, you look for:
Correct. Check mount, condition, gap, jaw engagement around kingpin shank (not the head), and release-arm lock position. Lubrication should be present but not excessive.
Question 11 of 20
The air lines connecting the tractor and trailer are:
Correct. The red glad-hand carries emergency/supply air; the blue glad-hand carries service air. They cross to keep matched colors when coupling.
Question 12 of 20
Before backing under a trailer to couple, you should:
Correct. Trailer should be just low enough that the fifth wheel will lift it slightly. Too low: the fifth wheel hits the trailer body. Too high: the fifth wheel slides under without engaging the kingpin.
Question 13 of 20
To make a trailer go where you want when backing, the steering wheel should:
Correct. Backing is opposite-direction steering: to swing the trailer right, turn the wheel left first, then correct as the trailer follows.
Question 14 of 20
A high-mounted trailer kingpin is dangerous because:
Correct. If the trailer is too high, the fifth wheel slides under without the kingpin engaging the locking jaws. The trailer is not coupled and can drop when you pull away.
Question 15 of 20
A combination vehicle on slippery roads should be driven:
Correct. Reduce speed by at least one third on wet roads and one half on snow; double following distance on slick surfaces.
Question 16 of 20
A safe practice when arriving at a destination is to:
Correct. Slow approach with mirror checks gives time to identify clearance issues and pedestrians.
Question 17 of 20
A loaded trailer "bows" (sways) at speed because:
Correct. Crosswinds and uneven loading can produce trailer sway. Slow down and allow the sway to dampen; do not over-correct with steering.
Question 18 of 20
A combination vehicle requires more time to stop than a single vehicle because:
Correct. Greater weight + brake-lag in long air lines = longer stopping distance. Plan ahead.
Question 19 of 20
A "trailer skid" happens when:
Correct. When trailer wheels lose traction (often from over-application of trailer brakes alone), the trailer can slide sideways — a trailer skid or trailer swing.
Question 20 of 20
When making a right turn at an intersection in a tractor-trailer:
Correct. Make the turn from the right lane. If you must swing wide, do so as you complete the turn, never before — swinging left first invites a vehicle to pass on your right.
About the Vermont Combination Vehicles exam
Most states administer 20 Combination Vehicles questions and require 80% to pass. The exam emphasizes the unique handling of articulated vehicles: how trailers track behind the tractor, how to prevent rollover, how to manage rearward amplification with multi-trailer combinations, and the correct sequence to couple and uncouple.
The Vermont Department of Motor Vehicles follows the federal CDL standards established by FMCSA. To earn the Combination Vehicles 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 Combination Vehicles question bank or browse all Vermont CDL practice tests.