Mechanical Reasoning Gym — Level 1
Level 1 builds the foundation: levers, gear direction, belt direction, and pulley advantage. This is the “no guessing” starting point for the USPS 955 mechanical sections.
- Levers: distance from fulcrum = leverage
- Gears: meshed gears reverse direction
- Belts: open = same direction, crossed = reverse
- Pulleys: more supports = less force
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Mechanical reasoning is not memorization. It’s relationship math: force, distance, direction, and ratio.
Lesson Before You Start
Most “smart” people struggle with mechanical questions for one reason: they try to solve them like word problems. Mechanical reasoning isn’t about vocabulary — it’s about a few repeatable rules you can apply under pressure.
The USPS 955 doesn’t require you to be a mechanic today. It tests whether you can think like one: if you can predict what will happen when a system changes. That’s what maintenance is every shift — diagnosing causes and effects, not guessing.
The four rules that carry Level 1
- Levers: torque = force × distance from fulcrum.
- Gears: each gear mesh reverses direction.
- Belts: open belt keeps direction; crossed belt reverses.
- Pulleys: supporting rope segments ≈ mechanical advantage.
Don’t stare at the whole diagram. Pick one relationship and verify it: “How many direction reversals?” “Which side has the longer lever arm?” “How many rope segments hold the load?”
Level 1 sets are short on purpose. You are building a daily habit: start, decide, verify, move on. Consistency beats intensity — especially for test performance.
Press Start below to load your Level 1 set.
Practice Set
Start → Question → Options → Explanation → Next
Press Start
Question 1 loads immediately.
Verify one relationship per question: distance, direction, or supports.
After-Session Lesson: The Maintenance Way of Thinking
Your goal isn’t to “learn machines” today. Your goal is to learn the thinking pattern: verify relationships, eliminate wrong outcomes, commit.
What to repeat tomorrow
- If gear direction is shaky, repeat Level 1 and focus only on “each mesh reverses direction.”
- If levers feel confusing, repeat with one rule: longer distance from fulcrum = more torque.
- If pulleys confuse you, count supporting segments — don’t overthink the drawing.
If Level 1 is solid, move to Level 2.
Explore More
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