2026/2027 | Grade A Verified Answers | Complete Solutions |
Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded
Section 1: Safe Set-Up & Ground Conditions (Q1-15)
Q1. A mobile crane is being set up near an unshored excavation that is 6 feet deep.
According to standard safe practice and OSHA guidelines, what is the minimum
recommended distance from the edge of the excavation to the crane outrigger?
A. 2 feet
B. 3 feet
C. 6 feet
D. 12 feet
Correct Answer: C. 6 feet [CORRECT]
Rationale: Standard safe practice requires the crane be set back at least a distance
equal to the depth of the excavation to prevent soil collapse under outrigger loading;
engineered mats or shoring may allow closer distances with engineering approval.
Options less than the excavation depth risk ground failure and tipping.
Q2. A mobile crane is being set up on compacted fill over a recently backfilled utility
trench. What is required before placing the crane and outriggers on this surface?
A. No special requirements if the fill appears visually solid
B. The fill must be engineered and compacted to support the crane loads, or outrigger
mats/cribbing must be used to distribute the load
C. Only the front outriggers require mats because the rear outriggers carry less load
D. Use the on-rubber load chart exclusively to avoid outrigger loads
Correct Answer: B. The fill must be engineered and compacted to support the crane
loads, or outrigger mats/cribbing must be used to distribute the load [CORRECT]
Rationale: Compacted fill, especially over trenches, may not support concentrated
outrigger loads without proper engineering or load distribution; mats/cribbing distribute
,pressure and prevent settlement. Visual assessment is inadequate, and using on-rubber
charts does not eliminate the need for stable ground.
Q3. A crane operator is setting up on a slope. The manufacturer requires the crane to be
level within 1 percent grade. The current grade is 2 percent. What is the correct action?
A. Operate at reduced capacity since the slope is minor
B. Re-level the crane using outriggers and blocking/cribbing to meet the manufacturer’s
level requirement before operations
C. Only extend the downhill outriggers further to compensate
D. Increase the boom angle to offset the slope
Correct Answer: B. Re-level the crane using outriggers and blocking/cribbing to meet the
manufacturer’s level requirement before operations [CORRECT]
Rationale: Operating out of level reduces capacity and shifts the tipping axis;
manufacturers specify level tolerances (typically 1 percent or less) that must be met
through proper blocking and cribbing. Extending only downhill outriggers or changing
boom angle does not correct the stability hazard.
Q4. During setup, an operator is unable to fully extend one outrigger due to jobsite
constraints. The crane has a partially extended outrigger chart. How does this affect
lifting operations?
A. Capacity increases on the side with the fully extended outrigger
B. Capacity must be determined from the partially extended outrigger configuration
chart, which is significantly reduced
C. Capacity remains unchanged as long as the load is swung over the fully extended
side
D. Only the swing speed must be reduced to 50 percent
Correct Answer: B. Capacity must be determined from the partially extended outrigger
configuration chart, which is significantly reduced [CORRECT]
Rationale: Partial outrigger extension changes the tipping axis and stability; the operator
must use the specific load chart for that configuration, which provides substantially
reduced capacities. Swinging to the fully extended side does not restore full capacity,
and swing speed restrictions alone are insufficient.
,Q5. Before digging or driving outriggers on a new job site, what is the first step to ensure
underground utility safety?
A. Assume no utilities are present if the area looks clear
B. Contact the One-Call/811 center at least 2 business days before work to locate
utilities
C. Probe the soil with the outrigger to test for obstructions
D. Review the crane load chart for utility clearance data
Correct Answer: B. Contact the One-Call/811 center at least 2 business days before
work to locate utilities [CORRECT]
Rationale: OSHA and state laws require notification to the One-Call system before
excavation to locate and mark underground utilities; this prevents strikes on gas,
electric, or communications lines. Visual clearance assumptions and probing with
equipment are dangerous and illegal.
Q6. An outrigger pad is 4 feet by 4 feet, and the outrigger load is 80,000 pounds. What is
the ground bearing pressure exerted by the outrigger?
A. 5,000 psf
B. 10,000 psf
C. 20,000 psf
D. 80,000 psf
Correct Answer: A. 5,000 psf [CORRECT]
Rationale: Ground bearing pressure equals force divided by area: 80,000 lbs ÷ (4 ft × 4 ft
= 16 sq ft) = 5,000 pounds per square foot. This value must be compared to the soil
bearing capacity to determine if larger mats are required.
Q7. A crane outrigger imposes a load of 120,000 pounds on soil with a maximum
allowable bearing pressure of 3,000 psf. What is the minimum outrigger pad area
required?
A. 20 square feet
B. 30 square feet
C. 40 square feet
D. 60 square feet
Correct Answer: C. 40 square feet [CORRECT]
, Rationale: Required area equals outrigger load divided by allowable ground bearing
pressure: 120,000 lbs ÷ 3,000 psf = 40 square feet. A 5 ft × 8 ft mat or 6.3 ft × 6.3 ft pad
would satisfy this minimum requirement.
Q8. A crane is being set up over a suspended basement parking slab. What is the
primary safety requirement?
A. Ensure the slab is at least 6 inches thick
B. Obtain structural engineer approval that the slab can support the crane outrigger
loads, or use engineered load distribution
C. Only operate over the rear because the slab is stronger there
D. Place outriggers directly over load-bearing walls only
Correct Answer: B. Obtain structural engineer approval that the slab can support the
crane outrigger loads, or use engineered load distribution [CORRECT]
Rationale: Suspended slabs are not designed for concentrated crane outrigger loads
without structural verification and load distribution systems; failure to confirm capacity
can result in slab collapse and crane tipping. Thickness alone does not confirm load
capacity.
Q9. During a lift, the operator notices one outrigger is sinking into the ground. What is
the correct immediate action?
A. Continue the lift if the load is below 50 percent of chart capacity
B. Immediately stop operations, lower the load, and reassess ground conditions and
matting requirements
C. Extend the other outriggers further to level the crane
D. Swing the load to the opposite side to transfer weight off the sinking outrigger
Correct Answer: B. Immediately stop operations, lower the load, and reassess ground
conditions and matting requirements [CORRECT]
Rationale: Outrigger settlement indicates inadequate ground bearing capacity and
creates an immediate tipping hazard; operations must cease to re-level and improve
ground support. Extending other outriggers or swinging the load exacerbates instability
and risks overturning.