FREE ASE G1 Practice Test 2026 — Auto Maintenance & Light Repair Questions
The ASE G1 Auto Maintenance & Light Repair certification is the entry-level ASE credential — and for many technicians, it's the gateway to a full ASE Master Technician career. The G1 exam tests diagnostic ability, not just memorization: you'll need to interpret symptoms, identify root causes, and select correct repair procedures across 6 vehicle systems. This page gives you 55 practice questions verified against the official ASE G1 task list and the latest OEM service standards.
Key Facts
- •ASE (National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence): the independent non-profit that certifies automotive technicians in the US and Canada. Founded 1972. Over 300,000 certified technicians.
- •ASE G1 exam: 55 scored questions (plus 10 unscored pretest questions), 90 minutes, 70% passing (computer-based). Administered at Prometric test centers or ASE.Campus online proctored.
- •G1 content distribution: Engine Systems (16%), Automatic Transmission (7%), Manual Drivetrain & Axles (14%), Suspension & Steering (24%), Brakes (20%), Electrical/Electronic Systems (15%), HVAC (7%).
- •ASE offers 52 certifications grouped into series: A-series (Auto/Light Truck A1-A9), T-series (Medium/Heavy Truck), S-series (School Bus), H-series (Transit Bus), X-series (Specialty), and L-series (Advanced Level Specialist).
- •Master Technician: requires A1-A8 + either G1 or L1. Re-certification every 5 years (tests are shorter than initial certification). You lose master status if any single certification expires.
- •The G1 is designed for generalist technicians — not engine rebuilders or transmission specialists. It focuses on diagnostic reasoning: 'Vehicle has symptom X. What is the most likely cause?' rather than 'What is the firing order of a Ford 5.0L V8?'
- •Key diagnostic tools tested: DMM (Digital Multimeter), OBD-II scan tool, pressure/vacuum gauge, compression tester, fuel pressure gauge, battery/charging system analyzer, refrigerant identifier, TPMS tool.
- •Our 55 practice questions are tagged by 6 knowledge nodes: engine systems, automatic transmission, suspension & steering, brakes, electrical, HVAC.
- •Average study time: 60-80 hours for first-time test takers. The ASE G1 Study Guide and Delmar's ASE Test Prep series are the most-used resources. Focus on scenario-based diagnostic questions — pure definition questions are rare.
Start ASE G1 Practice — 100% Free
55 verified questions across all 6 G1 domains. Diagnostic scenario-based questions. Mock exam mode with 90-minute timer. Every answer linked to ASE task list.
Start FREE ASE Practice →Brake Systems (20% of G1): The Highest-Weight Section
Brake systems carry the most weight on the G1 exam at 20%. You must know disc vs. drum brake operation, hydraulic principles, ABS fundamentals, wear diagnosis, and the relationship between brake symptoms and their causes. ASE brake questions are scenario-heavy: given a set of symptoms and measurements, identify the failed component.
Brake Symptom Diagnosis — Common G1 Scenarios
| Symptom | Most Likely Cause | Diagnostic Check | Repair Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brake pedal pulsation | Warped front brake rotors (disc thickness variation) | Measure rotor runout with dial indicator. Spec: <0.002 inch lateral runout. | Machine or replace rotors. Always replace pads when replacing rotors. |
| Vehicle pulls left during braking | Stuck right front caliper (or contaminated left pads) | Check caliper slide pins for binding. Inspect brake hoses for internal collapse. | Lubricate or replace slide pins. Replace collapsed hoses. Check caliper piston. |
| Low brake pedal (spongy feel) | Air in hydraulic system or low fluid | Check fluid level. Inspect for leaks. Perform brake fluid boiling point test. | Bleed brake system (start at furthest wheel from master cylinder). Top up fluid. |
| Grinding noise from one wheel | Worn brake pads — wear indicator contacting rotor | Inspect pad thickness. Minimum: 2/32 inch friction material. Check rotor surface. | Replace pads. Resurface or replace rotor if scored. Check caliper operation. |
| ABS light on, normal braking feel | ABS sensor or tone ring fault (not hydraulic issue) | Scan ABS DTCs. Check wheel speed sensor resistance and air gap. Inspect tone ring teeth. | Replace faulty sensor or damaged tone ring. Clear codes and verify. |
| Parking brake won't hold | Stretched parking brake cable or worn drum-in-hat shoes | Check cable adjustment. Measure shoe thickness inside rear rotor hat. | Adjust cable tension. Replace worn shoes. Verify lever travel spec (3-5 clicks typical). |
| Hard brake pedal (no power assist) | Vacuum leak or failed brake booster | Check vacuum hose to booster. Test booster with engine-off pedal feel test. | Replace vacuum hose if cracked. Replace booster if fails check (pedal doesn't drop on engine start). |
A customer complains of a brake pedal that slowly sinks to the floor while stopped at a red light with steady foot pressure. The brake fluid level is normal and there are no external leaks visible. What is the most likely cause?
- A. Worn front brake pads
- B. Air in the brake lines
- C. Leaking master cylinder internal seals (bypassing)
- D. Failed ABS pump motor
Reveal Answer & Explanation
A sinking brake pedal under constant pressure with normal fluid level and no external leaks is the classic symptom of an internally leaking master cylinder. The primary cup seals are bypassing — fluid is leaking past the piston internally rather than being forced through the lines. Air in the lines would cause a spongy pedal, not a sinking one. Worn pads cause a low pedal but not a sinking one. An ABS pump fault would set a DTC and wouldn't cause pedal sink. Source: ASE A5 Brakes Task List, Section B — Hydraulic System Diagnosis and Repair.
Suspension & Steering (24% of G1): The Diagnostic Heavyweight
Suspension and steering is the largest domain on G1 at 24% and includes the most scenario-based diagnostic questions. The ASE task list expects you to diagnose noise complaints (clunks, squeaks, pops), vibration complaints, pulling complaints, and tire wear patterns — each pointing to different root causes.
Tire Wear Patterns and Their Causes
| Wear Pattern | Appearance | Most Likely Cause | Required Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inner edge wear | Inner shoulder worn smooth, outer edge normal | Excessive negative camber OR worn lower ball joint / control arm bushing | Check camber alignment. Inspect ball joints and control arm bushings for play. |
| Outer edge wear | Outer shoulder worn smooth, inner edge normal | Excessive positive camber OR aggressive cornering | Check camber alignment. Inspect for bent strut or knuckle. |
| Feathering / scalloping | One edge of each tread block raised, opposite edge worn | Toe misalignment (too much toe-in or toe-out) | Adjust toe to spec. Check tie rod ends for wear. |
| Cupping (scalloped dips) | Random bald spots / dips around tread | Worn shock absorbers / struts OR unbalanced wheel assembly | Replace shocks/struts. Balance wheels. Check for bent wheel. |
| Center wear | Center of tread worn, edges normal | Overinflation — tire bulges in center, concentrates contact patch | Inflate to vehicle placard PSI (not sidewall max). |
| Edge wear (both shoulders) | Both shoulders worn, center normal | Underinflation — tire sags at edges, center lifts | Inflate to vehicle placard PSI. Check for slow leak. |
Steering Diagnosis Flow
G1 Steering Diagnostic Sequence
- 1Verify the complaint
Road test to confirm. Is it a pull (constant force needed), drift (gradual wander), or lead (vehicle goes straight but steering wheel off-center)? Each has different causes.
- 2Check tire pressures first
Unequal tire pressure is the #1 cause of pulling complaints. Always check and equalize before diagnosing alignment. A 5 PSI difference can cause a pull.
- 3Inspect front-end components
Jack up front end. Check ball joints with pry bar (vertical play = bad). Check tie rod ends (horizontal play = bad). Check inner tie rods (rack bellows, feel for play). Check control arm bushings for cracking or movement.
- 4Measure alignment angles
Camber: inward/outward tilt of tire top. Caster: forward/backward tilt of steering axis. Toe: inward/outward direction tires point. SAI (Steering Axis Inclination) and included angle for bent component diagnosis.
- 5Diagnose using angle relationships
A pull toward the more positive camber side is camber pull. A drift on crowned road with good alignment is normal (road crown). Steering wheel off-center with vehicle tracking straight = toe needs adjusting, not a pull.
Electrical Systems (15% of G1): Multimeter Mastery
ASE electrical questions test your ability to use a Digital Multimeter (DMM) and interpret readings. You MUST know Ohm's Law (V = I × R, or E = I × R in ASE notation), series vs. parallel circuit behavior, voltage drop testing, and starting/charging system diagnosis. The G1 does not go deep into CAN bus or module programming — those are A6/L1 territory.
A voltage drop test measures the voltage consumed by a circuit under load — it's the single most useful electrical diagnostic technique. Rule: voltage drop across any wire, connector, or switch should be <0.1V (per connection). Total voltage drop from battery positive to component and back to battery negative should be <0.5V for most circuits. Starter circuit exception: max 0.5V per cable (positive and negative). The test must be done with the circuit UNDER LOAD — a static resistance check won't find high-resistance connections.
A vehicle has a no-crank condition. The technician measures 12.6V at the battery, 12.6V at the starter solenoid B+ terminal with key OFF, and 10.2V at the starter solenoid B+ terminal with key in START position. What does this indicate?
- A. Failed starter motor
- B. High resistance in the battery positive cable or its terminals
- C. Bad ignition switch
- D. Discharged battery
Reveal Answer & Explanation
Battery reads 12.6V (fully charged, rules out discharged battery). Voltage at starter drops from 12.6V (no load) to 10.2V (under load) — a 2.4V voltage drop. The maximum allowed voltage drop for a starter circuit positive cable is 0.5V. This 2.4V drop confirms high resistance somewhere between the battery positive terminal and the starter B+ terminal (corroded terminal, failing cable, loose connection). The starter motor itself may be fine — fix the cable first, then re-test. Source: ASE A6 Electrical Task List, Section A — General Electrical Diagnosis.
Engine Systems (16% of G1): Diagnostic Reasoning
Engine systems on the G1 focus on diagnosis of common drivability complaints — misfires, rough idle, lack of power, excessive oil consumption, and fluid leaks. The exam expects you to use diagnostic trouble codes (DTCs) as a starting point, not an endpoint. A P0300 (random misfire) could be caused by fuel delivery, ignition, compression, or vacuum issues — the G1 tests your ability to narrow from general symptom to specific cause.
Common Engine DTC Categories and Diagnostic Approach
| DTC Category | Example Codes | First Checks | Common Fixes |
|---|---|---|---|
| P0300–P0308 (Misfire) | P0300 (random), P0301–P0308 (cylinder specific) | Scan for which cylinder(s). Swap coil/plug to confirm cylinder. Check fuel trim. Compression test. | Spark plugs, ignition coils, fuel injector, intake vacuum leak, low compression (head gasket/valves). |
| P0171/P0174 (Lean Bank 1/2) | P0171 (Bank 1 lean), P0174 (Bank 2 lean) | Check fuel trims (LTFT + STFT > +10% = lean). Look for vacuum leaks. Check MAF sensor and PCV. | Vacuum leak (intake gasket, cracked hose, PCV), dirty MAF sensor, low fuel pressure, exhaust leak before O2 sensor. |
| P0420/P0430 (Catalyst Efficiency) | P0420 (Bank 1), P0430 (Bank 2) | Compare upstream vs downstream O2 sensor waveforms. Downstream should be steady ~0.6V if cat is working. | Failed catalytic converter (most common), exhaust leak, O2 sensor fault (check before replacing cat). |
| P0440–P0457 (EVAP System) | P0442 (small leak), P0455 (large leak), P0457 (loose gas cap) | Check gas cap tight (free fix). Smoke test EVAP system. Monitor fuel tank pressure sensor. | Loose/missing gas cap, EVAP purge valve stuck open, cracked charcoal canister, leaking vent valve. Smoke machine is essential. |
HVAC (7% of G1): A/C Performance Testing
The HVAC section on G1 covers A/C system diagnosis and service. You need to understand the refrigeration cycle (compressor → condenser → orifice tube/TXV → evaporator → back to compressor), manifold gauge readings (low/high side pressures under different conditions), refrigerant types and handling (R-134a and R-1234yf), and cabin air filter service. R-12 is obsolete for G1 — they test R-134a and the newer R-1234yf systems.
A vehicle's A/C blows warm at idle but cools properly at highway speeds. The refrigerant charge is correct and the condenser fan operates normally. What is the most likely cause?
- A. Failed compressor clutch
- B. Weak compressor (worn internal seals/pistons)
- C. Clogged cabin air filter
- D. Overcharged system
Reveal Answer & Explanation
A compressor that works at higher RPM but fails at idle has worn internal components — piston rings, reed valves, or scroll seals are worn and can't compress efficiently at low speed. At higher engine RPM, the compressor spins fast enough to overcome internal leakage. A failed clutch would produce NO cooling at any speed. A clogged cabin filter reduces airflow but affects cooling at all speeds equally. An overcharged system would show abnormally high pressures on both gauges at all speeds. Verify: check high-side pressure at idle vs. 2000 RPM — minimal pressure increase when raising RPM confirms a weak compressor. Source: ASE A7 HVAC Task List, Section B — Refrigeration System Diagnosis.
How ASE Certification Works
Path to ASE Certification
- 1Meet the experience requirement
Most ASE tests require 2 years of hands-on work experience (or 1 year + applicable training program). G1 specifically: designed for entry-level technicians but experience still counts; student certification available if enrolled in an ASE-accredited program.
- 2Register for testing
Register online at ASE.com or call ASE. Tests offered year-round at Prometric test centers (computer-based) or via ASE.Campus online proctored testing. Registration fee: varies by test series, typically ~$47 per test (plus recertification fees).
- 3Pass the exam
Each test is 55-75 scored questions (plus 10 unscored pretest questions randomly distributed). Passing score: approximately 70% but ASE uses scaled scoring. You'll see Pass/Fail immediately on the screen.
- 4Receive certification
ASE certificate, wallet card, and shoulder patch arrive by mail in 2-3 weeks. Certification is valid for 5 years. Employer database verifies certification instantly.
- 5Recertification
Every 5 years you must recertify. Recertification tests are shorter (~half the questions). Master Technicians must keep all required certifications current or lose Master status.
Official Sources
Official ASE & Automotive Sources
- ASE — National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence — Official ASE website — test registration, task lists, study guides, certification verification, and recertification
- ASE G1 Auto Maintenance & Light Repair Task List — The official ASE G1 task list — every exam question maps to a specific task on this document. Free PDF download.
- Prometric — ASE Testing Centers — Testing provider for ASE exams — locate test centers, schedule exams, and review testing policies
- Delmar ASE Test Prep Series — The most widely used ASE test prep books — covers all A-series tests with practice exams and task list mapping
- Motor Age Training ASE Study Guides — Independent ASE study guides with diagnostic explanations and practice questions organized by task list
55 Free ASE G1 Questions — Start Now
All 6 G1 content domains covered. Diagnostic scenario-based questions. Mock exam mode with 90-minute timer. Every answer verified against ASE task lists. 100% free, no signup.
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