that's good, because I am constantly making minor calculator mistakes on my practice problems.I read somewhere that you will not need any high level math skills for the test, which was good because I forgot most of them.
You need to be at 100% on your general math and algebra.that's good, because I am constantly making minor calculator mistakes on my practice problems.[emoji20]34 minutes ago, Ship Wreck PE said: I read somewhere that you will not need any high level math skills for the test, which was good because I forgot most of them.
Lol, I figured it'd be easy, for an EE major.Full disclosure, I was one of those "average" engineering students. Too many Natural Lite kegs and engineering groupies in college. :B If I can pass you can too.
yeah I got that. Skimmed through it because I already went through the whole PPI book (2nd edition, which has more concepts) a few months ago.There is a book titled something like, "Elec. Engineering for non-Elec. Engineers" Depending upon your amount of time might be worth checking out. I'm serious. Could be helpful.
oh yeah, got all three.If you have not already purchased I strongly recommend Complex Imaginary and Spinup practice tests. Complex Imaginary also has an excellent study guide for the NEC. The Elec. Engineers Guide to Passing the Power PE by Alex Graffeo is also very good.
I think that my question was ambiguous enough. Just trying to find out the topics that I need to focus on, not specific problems that they use.I am always leery about answering questions where someone asks if a certain types of questions are on the exam. The powers that be are strict about the rule stating that details of particular problems should not be discussed. I prefer to err on the side of caution. A better way to ask might be are there diff eqns on any review material sample tests. I don't recall seeing any problems like that on the review material. As you study all the review materials discussed earlier you will get a good sense of the types of problems you should expect to see. I would also look at the NCEES sample exam. Not trying to brush your question off but better safe than sorry.
In my opinion/experience, those are advanced topics that tend to take much longer than 6 min. to solve. So they are not likely to show up specifically for the power PE exam.
I hear you.I think that my question was ambiguous enough. Just trying to find out the topics that I need to focus on, not specific problems that they use.
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