Question practice

309A Questions

A direct starting point for learners who want 309A questions to answer now, then a clear way to review what they missed.

Practice-focusedOfficial-source remindersQuestion examples

Who This Helps

Good forLearners searching for 309A questions before a practice session
Good forApprentices who want original questions with explanations
Good forAnyone who wants to see weak topics instead of only a final score
01

What the questions are designed to test

The goal is not to memorize a phrase. A useful 309A question should test whether you recognize the safest or most technically complete decision in a realistic electrical-work scenario.

Each question in the app has four choices, one best answer, and an explanation that points back to the concept being tested.

02

How to use questions without wasting them

  • Answer first without notes so the result reflects what you know under test conditions.
  • Review the explanation before starting another set.
  • Mark lucky guesses as review items even when the app counts them correct.
  • Use official material for current code, licensing, and exam requirements when a concept is rule-sensitive.
03

What to do after a miss

Write down why the best answer is better than the other choices. If you cannot explain that, the topic is not fully learned yet.

The dashboard helps by grouping performance by competency area so repeated misses turn into a focused study plan.

Practice Question Preview

These examples show the kind of reasoning you will practise in the app. Open the full app for scored practice, explanations, and progress tracking.

A feeder has been switched off before panel work begins. What should happen before conductors are touched?

Best answer:Apply lockout and prove absence of voltage with a tester verified before and after use.
This checks whether you recognize isolation as a process, not just a breaker-handle position.

A downstream panel has neutrals and bonding conductors tied together. What concern should you recognize?

Best answer:Normal neutral current can end up on bonding paths and metal parts.
This is a common grounding and bonding concept that shows up in both practical work and exam review.

A long branch circuit has normal voltage with no load but poor performance under load. What should be considered?

Best answer:Voltage drop caused by run length, load current, conductor size, or poor connections.
Good troubleshooting compares unloaded and loaded conditions instead of guessing at a failed load.

Ready to practise?

Start with the web app, answer a focused set of questions, then use your missed-question pattern to decide what to review next.

Practice Now