How I prepared for the PE Power exam...and what I would do differently
I was asked to post this to EB, so I created an account to start this thread. Wasn't aware of EB before. Below is not a guide or advice, only my experience. Feel free to share yours.
Passed April 2015 exam. First attempt.
Preparation materials:
[*]2014 NEC flashcards - bought this too late to get through all 224 flashcards. I was torn about spending the $ because you can't bring in the flashcards with you to the exam. If I were taking the exam again, I'd leverage these flashcards more because I'm weak on Code.
[*]2012 NESC - definitely useful to have during the exam. I didn't read end to end, just got a feel for Parts 1-3.
[*]2015 NFPA 70E (different from NEC, focuses on arc flash and shocks) - useful during the exam. Didn't read end to end. Went through and tabbed sections.
References brought into the exam:
What I would do differently:
I was asked to post this to EB, so I created an account to start this thread. Wasn't aware of EB before. Below is not a guide or advice, only my experience. Feel free to share yours.
Passed April 2015 exam. First attempt.
Preparation materials:
- Graffeo Guide to Passing Power PE - one of the most useful prep books because it was damn succinct. Didn't have time to get into the Graffeo sample exam so won't comment on that.
- ppi2pass review course package, which included items below. Everyone at work recommended taking a prep class. It was useful, but there were things I would have changed if I had to do it again (see below) because 7 hours of class per week plus homework sucks up your time like a black hole.
ppi reference manual - I read most of chapters 26 to 56. This reference saved me a couple of time on some of the obscure topics during the actual test but there's a lot of extraneous material if you're using it to study.
- ppi exam café - this is online sample test questions. I went through maybe 10 questions and didn't find it useful. In all fairness, I didn't give this much of a chance.
- ppi practice problems - some useful refresher problems as long as you don't get bogged down by the long problems. There are problems that will take pages to work out; you know you will never see these on the PE because you only get an average of 6 minutes per problem.
- ppi sample exam - same comments as ppi practice problems above.
- 2014 NEC - got to know some of the tables and tab locations. I never use the NEC in real life and, based upon my exam experience, my cursory prep was not enough depth to answer the exam questions.
- NCEES power practice exam - really useful in helping to get a feel for the exam.
[*]2014 NEC flashcards - bought this too late to get through all 224 flashcards. I was torn about spending the $ because you can't bring in the flashcards with you to the exam. If I were taking the exam again, I'd leverage these flashcards more because I'm weak on Code.
[*]2012 NESC - definitely useful to have during the exam. I didn't read end to end, just got a feel for Parts 1-3.
[*]2015 NFPA 70E (different from NEC, focuses on arc flash and shocks) - useful during the exam. Didn't read end to end. Went through and tabbed sections.
References brought into the exam:
- All of the above, except for exam café and flashcards (not bound). The review course included lecture slides and ancillary materials from the instructor, which I bound and brought with me. I didn't refer to either of those during the exam.
What I would do differently:
- Used Graffeo as the cornerstone and then take deeper dives into ppi Reference Manual chapters as needed. For example, look at the ppi chapter on Lighting: it's an insanely long read for the topic weighting.
- Should have looked at the NCEES sample exam problems earlier, weeks ahead.
- There are 100 participants online during the ppi lectures and they inevitably cater to the lowest denominator. If 1 guy out of 100 has a question about a slide, lectures can be a painfully slow slog and prep time is precious. If I had it to do over again, I'd put less emphasis on attending, probably double up and work problems during lecture or watch the recorded version.
- ppi class runs up until April 4th with the last meeting on April 8th, prior to the April 15th exam - that's too late. A lot of people were always covering material and submitting homework ahead of class and now I know why. I should have finished earlier and allowed at least 2 weeks to a month for pure review, i.e. only working practice problems.