Going for my second try in October. I failed with a 48. I had about 2 months to study while having a full time job and young children, so I contribute most of my failure to lack of time to study (but company paying for test so take it and fail or maybe pass, instead of waiting another 6 months).
I didn't look up much information during the exam or use the books I brought with me since I like to teach myself the information. But I was weak in rotating machines and/or the analytical questions.
So i started hard on those so far, and found that I might be better off creating a binder for each "type" of question on the exam and it may help with lookups for the exam and save time. i.e. A binder for protection, one for NEC, one for rotating machines etc. This way I have one entire binder with all of the similar questions in it, instead of looking through 12 books to find that one question that may help me. Each binder would contain sample questions, as well as study notes etc I have downloaded from different sites and books.
My real question is, has anyone else put this strategy to the test and liked or disliked it?
I didn't look up much information during the exam or use the books I brought with me since I like to teach myself the information. But I was weak in rotating machines and/or the analytical questions.
So i started hard on those so far, and found that I might be better off creating a binder for each "type" of question on the exam and it may help with lookups for the exam and save time. i.e. A binder for protection, one for NEC, one for rotating machines etc. This way I have one entire binder with all of the similar questions in it, instead of looking through 12 books to find that one question that may help me. Each binder would contain sample questions, as well as study notes etc I have downloaded from different sites and books.
My real question is, has anyone else put this strategy to the test and liked or disliked it?