VADEN Originalairbrakecompressor.com
Driver knowledge (CDL)

CDL Air Brake Test: The Seven-Step Pre-Trip Check

A driver-focused walkthrough of the seven-step air brake check the CDL exam requires, with the exact pressures and leakage limits you have to hit.

Reviewed by VADEN Original 4 min read Updated July 2026

The CDL air brake test has two parts: knowledge questions on the written exam, and a hands-on seven-step air brake check you perform during the pre-trip inspection and driving portion. To pass the hands-on part you have to demonstrate the check in order and hit specific pressures: the low-air warning must come on before 60 psi, the spring brakes must apply automatically around 20-45 psi, air leakage must stay within limits, and the compressor governor must cut out and cut in at the right pressures. Here is exactly what the examiner is looking for.

The seven-step air brake check

Start with the system fully charged (engine has built air to normal operating pressure, roughly 120 psi). Then work through the steps below. This is the same sequence printed in the CDL manual, and examiners expect you to name what you are doing as you do it.

StepWhat you doPass criteria
1. Low-air warningKey on, engine off. Step on and off the brake pedal to bleed tank pressure down.Warning light and buzzer come on before pressure drops below 60 psi.
2. Spring brake pop-outKeep fanning the pressure down with the pedal.Parking/tractor protection valves pop out (spring brakes apply) at about 20-45 psi.
3. Air buildup rateStart the engine, run at operating rpm.Dual system builds from 85 to 100 psi within 45 seconds.
4. Leakage testCharge to ~125 psi, shut engine off. Time static drop, then do the applied test.Within the limits in the table below.
5. Governor cut-in / cut-outRun engine to cut-out, then fan pressure down to cut-in.Cut-out ~120-135 psi; cut-in ~100-110 psi (per manufacturer spec).
6. Parking brakeSet the parking brake, tug gently against it in low gear.Brake holds the vehicle.
7. Service brakesRoll forward at ~5 mph, apply the pedal firmly.Stops straight, no pulling, no delay or unusual feel.

Static and applied leakage limits

Step 4 trips up more drivers than any other, because there are two separate leak checks and the numbers change depending on whether you are in a single truck or a combination (tractor-trailer). First the static test: with the system fully charged, engine off and the service brakes released, watch the gauge for one minute. Then the applied leakage test: press and hold the brake pedal at 90 psi or more and time the drop again. Holding at 90 psi loads the service circuit, so a slightly higher loss is allowed.

TestSingle vehicleCombination vehicle
Static (brakes released)≤ 2 psi in 1 minute≤ 3 psi in 1 minute
Applied (held at ~90 psi)≤ 3 psi in 1 minute≤ 4 psi in 1 minute

If your rig drops faster than this, do not try to talk your way through it — you have a real leak. Common culprits are leaking glad-hand seals, a worn compressor discharge line, a governor bleeding down, or a saturated air dryer purging constantly. If the numbers are borderline on test day, they will be worse on the road; the fix belongs in the shop, not the test lot. The same limits are what you should hold yourself to during everyday pre-trips (see why an air brake system loses pressure).

Low-air warning and spring brake pop-out

Steps 1 and 2 are done as one continuous drain-down with the engine off. As you fan the pedal, the pressure falls and two things must happen in sequence:

  • Low-air warning (before 60 psi): the dash light and buzzer must activate while there is still usable air. On most trucks it trips around 55-60 psi.
  • Spring brakes apply (~20-45 psi): keep bleeding pressure and the spring (parking) brakes set themselves automatically. On a tractor-trailer, the tractor protection valve and parking valve knobs pop out in this window. This is the fail-safe that stops the vehicle if the air system dies.

Both events are safety features, not faults. The exam is checking that they still work in the correct order.

Governor cut-in and cut-out

Step 5 verifies the compressor loads and unloads at the right pressures. With the engine running, air builds until the governor reaches cut-out (typically ~120-135 psi) and signals the compressor to stop pumping into the tanks. Fan the pressure down with the pedal and the governor should cut in again (~100-110 psi), putting the compressor back on load. If the governor never cuts out, the system can over-pressurize; if it cuts out too low, you will run short of air. How this control actually works is covered in detail on the air brake governor page.

Minimum psi to release and get moving

Once the spring brakes have popped out during the check, you have to rebuild air to release them. The governor won't let you charge fully until the compressor is loaded, but the practical rule is simple: do not attempt to move until pressure is back up to normal operating range (~120 psi) and the parking brake knobs push in and stay in. Trying to drive off on partial air — before the spring brakes fully release — drags the brakes and can strand you in the intersection.

When a failed test points to hardware, not technique

If a truck repeatedly fails the buildup or leakage steps no matter how carefully you run the procedure, the problem is in the air brake hardware, not your technique. A worn compressor that can't make air in time, a governor that leaks down, or an air dryer purging non-stop will all show up as slow buildup or excessive loss. Getting the vehicle back to spec means servicing those parts with OE-grade air brake system components rather than chasing symptoms. Once the underlying system holds pressure and builds on time, the seven-step check becomes routine.

The air brake check is only one piece of qualifying to drive an air-equipped vehicle; the rules around the restriction and how to clear it are on the air brake endorsement page.

VADEN Original air brake compressor
VADEN Original

Need the part, not just the answer?

OE-grade air brake compressors and repair kits, manufactured and tested to commercial-vehicle standards.

air brake system components

Published by VADEN Original. Product links point to the manufacturer's official catalogue. Specifications are general — always confirm figures against your vehicle's service manual.

Frequently asked questions

What is the passing air loss rate on the CDL air brake test?
With the engine off and brakes released (static), pressure may drop no more than 2 psi per minute in a single vehicle or 3 psi in a combination. With the brakes applied and held at 90 psi, the limits rise to 3 and 4 psi per minute respectively.
At what psi must the low-air warning come on?
The low-air warning light and buzzer must activate before system pressure falls below 60 psi. On most trucks it triggers around 55-60 psi as you fan the pedal down.
At what pressure do the spring brakes pop out?
The spring (parking) brakes apply automatically as tank pressure falls to roughly 20-45 psi. This is the fail-safe that stops the vehicle if the air system loses pressure.
What is the 90 psi step in the air brake test?
That is the applied leakage test: you press and hold the brake pedal at 90 psi or more, then time how fast pressure drops. Holding pressure in the service circuit reveals leaks that a released-brake check would miss.
What are the governor cut-in and cut-out pressures?
Cut-out, where the compressor stops pumping into the tanks, is typically about 120-135 psi. Cut-in, where it resumes, is usually about 100-110 psi, though exact values vary by vehicle.
Do I need to build full air pressure before driving after the check?
Yes. After the spring brakes pop out during the check, rebuild to normal operating pressure (around 120 psi) and confirm the parking knobs stay in before moving. Driving on partial air drags the brakes.