Industrial Roads: ICBC Class 4 Practice Questions
Get comfortable with Industrial Roads before test day. Same style of questions ICBC actually asks, an instant score, and a clear look at where you need more practice.
Practise Industrial Roads
One question at a time, just on this topic. Once you're done, you'll get your score and a full breakdown of every answer. 80% is a pass, and there are 15 questions in the bank to draw from.
Practise Industrial Roads NowSample questions
A taste of what's in this category, with the answer and why. Hit practise above for the full set.
On most BC resource (forest service) roads, which traffic generally has the right of way?
- A Empty vehicles travelling uphill
- B Whoever arrives first
- Loaded vehicles, and traffic travelling downhill
- D Passenger cars only
Why: Loaded and downhill traffic has the right of way on resource roads; uphill/empty vehicles should pull over and let them pass.
Why is a two-way radio strongly recommended on BC resource roads?
- To call your position so other drivers know where you are
- B For listening to music
- C It is required to start the engine
- D It improves fuel economy
Why: Resource roads are narrow with limited sight lines; calling your location by radio lets other drivers know where you are and avoid collisions.
Roadside signs on resource roads typically tell you the:
- A Fuel prices
- Radio channel, road name and kilometre location
- C Weather forecast
- D Nearest restaurant
Why: Standardized signs show the radio channel, road name, distance marker (kilometre) and direction so you can make correct radio calls.
When you meet an oncoming loaded logging truck on a narrow resource road, you should:
- A Hold your ground and make them move
- B Stop in the middle of the road
- C Speed up to pass first
- Find a pullout and wait until it has passed
Why: Yield to the loaded vehicle: pull into a turnout and wait until it has safely gone by before continuing.
Most BC resource roads are best described as:
- A "Radio controlled": you may not enter without permission
- B Closed to all traffic
- "Radio assisted": radios help but you must still drive defensively
- D The same as a highway
Why: Most resource roads are radio "assisted," not "controlled." Radio calls aid safety, but you must still drive cautiously and be ready to stop.
On resource roads where you call your kilometres, you should:
- Announce your location and direction on the posted channel
- B Stay silent to avoid clutter
- C Use any channel you like
- D Only call when stopped
Why: You announce your kilometre and direction of travel on the road’s posted channel so others can picture where you are.