I'm pretty sure Zach Stone recommend buying two calculators and bringing them to the exam. At first I thought this was overkill, but now I know why he said it.
I took a timed 8-hour practice exam yesterday. I had just started the afternoon portion when my calculator "froze". I was using the "store" function and I don't remember if I hit the same button twice in succession or what I did to make it "freeze", but all of a sudden, none of the buttons worked. I saw some little hourglass symbol in the display, something I had never seen before. I couldn't even turn it off. I thought, "if this was the real exam I'd be panicking."
Then I discovered the little "reset" button at the bottom of the back of the calculator. That did the trick and I was back on track, losing maybe only a half a minute on time.
I was doing ok, or so I thought. I realized I was running into problems I really thought I knew how to do but wasn't getting any of the answer choices. I discovered when I reset the calculator the modes were also reset to factory defaults, so when I was calculating complex numbers I was getting wrong answers.
Don't let this happen to you! If you're only bringing one calculator, at least know how to reset it, bring a spare set of batteries and know what modes you're using so you can quickly set it back up if you have to go through this.
Here's what I have mine set to (when I press "Mode":
DEG, NORM, 3 (instead of FLOAT), r<0 (instead of REAL), DEC, and MATHPRINT
I took a timed 8-hour practice exam yesterday. I had just started the afternoon portion when my calculator "froze". I was using the "store" function and I don't remember if I hit the same button twice in succession or what I did to make it "freeze", but all of a sudden, none of the buttons worked. I saw some little hourglass symbol in the display, something I had never seen before. I couldn't even turn it off. I thought, "if this was the real exam I'd be panicking."
Then I discovered the little "reset" button at the bottom of the back of the calculator. That did the trick and I was back on track, losing maybe only a half a minute on time.
I was doing ok, or so I thought. I realized I was running into problems I really thought I knew how to do but wasn't getting any of the answer choices. I discovered when I reset the calculator the modes were also reset to factory defaults, so when I was calculating complex numbers I was getting wrong answers.
Don't let this happen to you! If you're only bringing one calculator, at least know how to reset it, bring a spare set of batteries and know what modes you're using so you can quickly set it back up if you have to go through this.
Here's what I have mine set to (when I press "Mode":
DEG, NORM, 3 (instead of FLOAT), r<0 (instead of REAL), DEC, and MATHPRINT