Finally got around to creating an account on here to post.
First time test taker here, I started studying in January everyday for 2+ hours after work and 5-8 hours a day on the weekends. I took a prep class (School of PE) and thought it was relatively worthless (the instructors were terrible). I also used Graffeo, CI, NCEES Practice Exam, PRM, Wildi, Grainger, Glover/Sarma, NEC Handbook, Tom Henry's (probably most used resource), NESC, other various standards, grad school notes, undergrad notes, standard handbook for EEs, a general Power Electronics book, and a Protective Relaying book. I am 3 years out of grad school, without doing barely a hint of real engineering at my job. I decided to take the Power PE because I focused on Power in Undergrad as well as grad school, however I have had zero experience in the power industry since graduating and had never cracked open the NEC or NESC before studying for the exam. I ultimately decided on the Power exam because I would like to secure a job at a utility or consulting firm someday.
Prior to the exam: I felt pretty good about the test. I felt comfortable with the NEC and NFPA 70E. I was scoring in the 90's on all the practice exams I was taking.
Morning exam experience: My initial thoughts were, "what the hell is this garbage"? At least 4 questions I had no idea how to answer and my 10+ reference books contained zero information on said questions. I felt like some of the questions asked were not fair exam questions (additionally the classic: the answer is MOST NEARLY what, with my calculated result being at least 15% from the nearest choice even though I was 100% confident I had calculated it correctly). I left this section feeling depressed and defeated. I ate lunch in my car and just tried to collect myself.
Afternoon exam experience: Much better. This is how I was originally expecting the entire exam to go. I finished with an hour remaining and spend that hour trying to find the answers to, again, 3-4ish problems that I had never seen or heard of before. I left this section feeling that I had scored a 90%.
Overall: I left the exam site that day not knowing how to feel. I did not feel like I had passed, nor did I feel like I had failed. I guess I will find out here in the next few days. Those of you that took the same exam probably remember those few problems that I didn't know how to solve, to this day I am still frustrated and scratching my head over them. Maybe I feel this way because I am used to scoring in the 90's on exams, and when I don't I feel like I failed the exam. So hopefully a 58/80ish score is what I achieved (a passable score) and I feel this way because I simply did not "ace" the exam.
Looking forward to the results being published in the next few days, good luck to all!