IUOE Exam Prep

IUOE Aptitude Test Practice Questions (Real Examples)

Nobody warned you the IUOE entrance exam was going to look like a math test. You've been running a dozer or an excavator, not sitting in a classroom — and now they want you to calculate cubic yards and gear ratios before you can hold a card.

Here's what you need to know: the math isn't hard. It's just unfamiliar. The mechanical reasoning is stuff you already understand from working the machines — it's just packaged in a way that throws people off. These 8 practice questions use real construction examples. Work through them. Check the answers. Then do it again until the process feels automatic.

Math Questions

Q1. You're digging a trench 150 ft long, 3 ft wide, and 5 ft deep. How many cubic yards of material will you excavate?

B — 83 cy. Volume in cubic feet = 150 × 3 × 5 = 2,250 cf. Convert to cubic yards: 2,250 ÷ 27 = 83.3, round to 83 cy. There are 27 cubic feet in one cubic yard (3 × 3 × 3). Don't skip the conversion — this is the most common trap on the test.

Q2. A road rises 12 feet over a horizontal distance of 200 feet. What is the percent grade?

C — 6%. Percent grade = (Rise ÷ Run) × 100 = (12 ÷ 200) × 100 = 6%. Grade is always rise over horizontal run, not the slope length. If you use the wrong denominator, you'll get 16.7% — wrong answer, wrong card.

Q3. A site needs 350 cubic yards of material moved. Each truck holds 14 cubic yards. How many loads does it take?

C — 25 loads. 350 ÷ 14 = 25. Clean division. No rounding needed. Watch for questions that give you cubic feet and a truck capacity in cubic yards — that's the trap version of this question.

Q4. Compaction specs call for 95% Proctor. The lab shows a maximum dry density of 118 lbs/cf. What is the minimum acceptable field density?

C — 112.1 lbs/cf. 118 × 0.95 = 112.1 lbs/cf. Percent of a number = multiply by the decimal. 95% = 0.95. This is a compaction calculation you'll use in the field — and it's on the test.
⚠️ Unit Trap Warning: Cubic Feet vs. Cubic Yards
The test loves mixing units. A question might give you dimensions in feet but ask for the answer in cubic yards — or give you a truck capacity in cubic yards when the volume is in cubic feet. Always check your units before you calculate. One cubic yard = 27 cubic feet. Write that number at the top of your scratch paper and don't forget it.

Mechanical Reasoning Questions

Q5. You increase hydraulic system pressure. What happens to the force the cylinder can produce?

C — Force increases. Force = Pressure × Area. If pressure goes up and the cylinder area is the same, force goes up. This is Pascal's Law in action — the same principle that lets a small pump move a 30-ton excavator arm.

Q6. Gear A has 20 teeth and turns at 300 RPM. It drives Gear B which has 60 teeth. How fast does Gear B turn?

D — 100 RPM. Gear ratio = teeth on B ÷ teeth on A = 60 ÷ 20 = 3. Gear B turns 3× slower: 300 ÷ 3 = 100 RPM. More teeth = slower rotation. Bigger driven gear always spins slower than the driver.

Q7. A block and tackle system has 4 rope segments supporting the load. You need to lift a 2,000 lb load. How much force do you need to pull?

D — 500 lbs. Mechanical advantage = number of rope segments = 4. Required force = 2,000 ÷ 4 = 500 lbs. More rope segments = less force required. You trade pulling distance for pulling force.

Q8. A hydraulic cylinder is slowly drifting down under load even though the machine is not commanded to move. What is the most likely cause?

C — Internal seal failure. Slow uncontrolled drift under load = fluid bypassing the piston inside the cylinder. Worn or damaged internal seals let oil pass from the high-pressure side to the low-pressure side. You've probably seen this in the field — now you know what to call it on the test.

Keep Practicing

These 8 questions cover the core question types you'll see on test day. For deeper work on the math side — including more volume, grade, and density problems with step-by-step walkthroughs — go to IUOE Test Math Questions.

For more mechanical reasoning including full hydraulics, gears, pulleys, and levers practice, see IUOE Mechanical Reasoning Practice.

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