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100+ Free Red Seal Parts Technician Practice Questions

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2026 Statistics

Key Facts: Red Seal Parts Technician Exam

100

Practice Questions

OpenExamPrep

120

Exam Questions

Red Seal

4 hours

Time Limit

Red Seal

70%

Passing Score

Red Seal

5 blocks

Major Work Activities

Red Seal RSOS

~$150

Exam Fee (Ontario)

Provincial authority

The Red Seal Parts Technician exam is the interprovincial (IP) certification for parts professionals in Canada who identify, acquire, warehouse, and sell parts. It contains 120 four-option multiple-choice questions delivered over about four hours, and you need 70% to pass. The exam is built on the Red Seal Occupational Standard and is weighted across five blocks: Common Occupational Skills (16%), Customer Service (22%), Parts Acquisition (24%), Warehousing and Inventory (25%), and Business Practices (13%). Fees are set by each province or territory and typically run about $100-170 CAD (for example $150 plus HST in Ontario). This free prep includes 100 research-based practice questions with explanations and an AI tutor.

Sample Red Seal Parts Technician Practice Questions

Try these sample questions to test your Red Seal Parts Technician exam readiness. Each question includes a detailed explanation. Start the interactive quiz above for the full 100+ question experience with AI tutoring.

1Under WHMIS 2015, what is the distinctive shape of the border used on a hazard pictogram such as the flame or corrosion symbol?
A.A yellow triangle
B.A red square set on one of its points (a diamond)
C.A blue circle
D.A black rectangle
Explanation: WHMIS 2015 aligned with the Globally Harmonized System (GHS). Every pictogram except the biohazardous infectious materials symbol uses a red square set on one of its points (a diamond shape) with the hazard symbol shown in black inside.
2A safety data sheet (SDS) under WHMIS 2015 must contain a standardized number of sections. How many sections are there?
A.9 sections
B.12 sections
C.16 sections
D.20 sections
Explanation: WHMIS 2015 adopted the GHS 16-section SDS format. Sections 1-8 cover identification, hazards, composition, first aid, fire-fighting, accidental release, handling/storage, and exposure controls; sections 9-16 cover physical properties through other information.
3When manually lifting a heavy box of parts from the floor, which technique reduces the risk of back injury?
A.Bend at the waist and keep the legs straight
B.Twist the torso while lifting to save a step
C.Keep the load close to the body, bend the knees, and lift with the legs
D.Hold the load at arm's length to keep it away from your face
Explanation: Proper manual lifting keeps the load close to the body to reduce leverage on the spine, bends the knees so the powerful leg muscles do the work, and keeps the back straight. This minimizes compressive and shear forces on the lower back.
4Before operating a counterbalance forklift to move palletized stock, what must a certified operator do at the start of the shift?
A.Complete a pre-operational (circle) inspection of the forklift
B.Refuel only after the shift ends
C.Raise the forks fully to test the hydraulics under load
D.Remove the seatbelt to allow quick exit
Explanation: A documented pre-operational or circle-check inspection (tires, forks, mast, brakes, horn, fluids, leaks, controls) is required before each shift to catch defects before they cause injury or damage.
5A parts technician stores aerosol brake cleaner and engine oils. Which storage practice best controls fire risk?
A.Store flammable aerosols beside the space heater for warmth
B.Keep flammable and combustible products in an approved, ventilated flammable-storage cabinet away from ignition sources
C.Stack open cans of oil near the loading-dock smoking area
D.Store oxidizers and flammables together to save space
Explanation: Flammable and combustible liquids must be kept in approved, vented flammable-storage cabinets away from heat and ignition sources. Incompatible classes such as oxidizers must be segregated to prevent reactions.
6Under Canada's Transportation of Dangerous Goods (TDG) Regulations, into how many hazard classes are dangerous goods divided?
A.5 classes
B.7 classes
C.9 classes
D.11 classes
Explanation: The TDG Regulations divide dangerous goods into 9 classes by the type of hazard: 1 Explosives, 2 Gases, 3 Flammable liquids, 4 Flammable solids, 5 Oxidizers/organic peroxides, 6 Toxic/infectious, 7 Radioactive, 8 Corrosives, and 9 Miscellaneous.
7Under the TDG Regulations, who is responsible for preparing and completing the shipping document before a carrier takes possession of dangerous goods?
A.The carrier (trucking company)
B.The consignor (shipper)
C.The consignee (receiver)
D.The provincial inspector
Explanation: The consignor (the person who offers the dangerous goods for transport) must classify the goods and complete the shipping document before the carrier takes possession. The document gives emergency responders the identity, quantity, and hazard of the load.
8Under TDG, a small means of containment generally requires a hazard label, while a large means of containment requires a placard. What capacity is the dividing threshold?
A.100 litres
B.450 litres
C.1,000 litres
D.5,000 litres
Explanation: Under the TDG Regulations a label is used on a small means of containment with a capacity of 450 L or less, and a placard is required on a large means of containment greater than 450 L. The threshold helps determine the correct dangerous-goods marks.
9Lead-acid batteries returned for core credit can leak sulphuric acid. Which PPE and handling step is most appropriate when processing them?
A.Carry them by the terminals with bare hands
B.Wear acid-resistant gloves and eye protection and keep batteries upright
C.Store them inverted to drain any acid onto the floor
D.Stack them loosely on a wooden shelf above eye level
Explanation: Lead-acid batteries contain corrosive sulphuric acid (TDG Class 8). Handlers should wear acid-resistant gloves and eye protection, keep batteries upright to prevent spills, and store them in a ventilated, contained area for recycling.
10What is the purpose of a 'core charge' (core deposit) when selling a remanufactured part such as an alternator or starter?
A.It is a tax collected on behalf of the government
B.It is a refundable deposit that encourages the customer to return the old rebuildable unit
C.It is a delivery surcharge for heavy items
D.It is the dealer's profit margin on the part
Explanation: A core charge is a refundable deposit added to a remanufactured part. When the customer returns the old, rebuildable 'core,' the charge is credited back. Cores are sent to remanufacturers as raw material, supporting the reman supply chain.

About the Red Seal Parts Technician Exam

The Red Seal Parts Technician interprovincial exam certifies parts professionals who acquire, store, sell, and manage automotive, heavy-equipment, and industrial parts. The exam has 120 multiple-choice questions over four hours and requires 70% to pass.

Assessment

120 four-option multiple-choice questions across five blocks (Common Occupational Skills, Customer Service, Parts Acquisition, Warehousing and Inventory, Business Practices); 70% to pass; this practice bank is 100 selected-response items

Time Limit

4 hours

Passing Score

70%

Exam Fee

~$100-170 CAD, varies by province (for example $150 + HST in Ontario) (Employment and Social Development Canada / Red Seal Program, delivered by provincial and territorial apprenticeship authorities)

Red Seal Parts Technician Exam Content Outline

16%

Performs Common Occupational Skills

Workplace safety, WHMIS 2015/GHS and SDS, material handling and lifting, forklift pre-use checks, spill response, and safe hazardous-product storage

22%

Performs Customer Service

Counter and phone service, active listening, suggestive and kit selling, merchandising, returns/warranties, service recovery, pricing, and credit accounts

24%

Performs Parts Acquisition

Parts identification, VIN and casting-number decoding, electronic catalogues, cross-reference/supersession, OEM vs aftermarket, special orders, and purchasing

25%

Performs Warehousing and Inventory

Min/max and reorder points, cycle counting, ABC analysis, FIFO rotation, safety stock, turnover, slotting, dead stock, shrinkage, and inventory accuracy

13%

Applies Business Practices

Purchase orders, invoices, three-way match, credit memos, taxes (GST/HST), margin/markup, the purchasing cycle, and dealer-management systems

How to Pass the Red Seal Parts Technician Exam

What You Need to Know

  • Passing score: 70%
  • Assessment: 120 four-option multiple-choice questions across five blocks (Common Occupational Skills, Customer Service, Parts Acquisition, Warehousing and Inventory, Business Practices); 70% to pass; this practice bank is 100 selected-response items
  • Time limit: 4 hours
  • Exam fee: ~$100-170 CAD, varies by province (for example $150 + HST in Ontario)

Keys to Passing

  • Complete 500+ practice questions
  • Score 80%+ consistently before scheduling
  • Focus on highest-weighted sections
  • Use our AI tutor for tough concepts

Red Seal Parts Technician Study Tips from Top Performers

1Weight your study toward warehousing/inventory and parts acquisition - together they make up nearly half the exam
2Master inventory control math: min/max order-up-to (max - on hand - on order), reorder points, turnover (COGS / average inventory), and margin vs markup
3Know the difference between cross-reference/interchange (across brands) and supersession (the same maker's replacement number)
4Be able to read a VIN: 17 characters, WMI in positions 1-3, check digit at position 9, and model year at position 10
5Review safety and handling rules: WHMIS 2015 pictograms, the 16-section SDS, and TDG's 9 hazard classes and label/placard threshold (450 L)
6Complete all 100 practice questions and review every miss with the AI tutor before sitting the exam

Frequently Asked Questions

How many questions are on the Red Seal Parts Technician exam and how long is it?

The Red Seal Parts Technician interprovincial exam has 120 four-option multiple-choice questions and you have about four hours to complete it. You need 70% to pass.

What score do I need to pass the Red Seal Parts Technician exam?

You need 70% to pass. Because the exam is weighted across five blocks (common skills, customer service, parts acquisition, warehousing/inventory, and business practices), balanced preparation across every block is important.

How much does the Red Seal Parts Technician exam cost?

Fees are set by each province or territory and typically run about $100-170 CAD. For example, Ontario charges $150 plus HST. Contact your provincial apprenticeship authority for the exact current fee.

What topics does the Parts Technician exam cover?

It covers common occupational skills and safety, customer service and sales, parts acquisition and identification (VIN, catalogues, cross-reference/supersession), warehousing and inventory control, and business practices such as purchasing and documentation.

What is the heaviest-weighted area on the exam?

Warehousing and Inventory is the largest block at about 25%, closely followed by Parts Acquisition at about 24% and Customer Service at about 22%. Master inventory control techniques like min/max, cycle counting, ABC analysis, and FIFO.

Is this free Parts Technician practice as good as paid prep?

Our 100 practice questions cover the same five Red Seal blocks as the official standard, with a teaching explanation for every answer plus free daily AI tutor interactions. All content is free forever and updated for 2026.