I wanted to post my experience with the exam as I hope it will help someone in the future in a similar situation.
I graduated in 2007 with a BS in EE and have been working since then in many different fields/jobs. I got into the electrical utility industry in 2016. I took the Electrical FE in December of 2017 and passed on my first try (studied off and on starting in August 2017). I didn’t have an issue submitting the paperwork to NY in order to sit for the PE exam, and was approved. The process of filling it out was not fun, but it’s hard to document your experience sometimes.
I was going to be deployed to Puerto Rico to help with restoration efforts in middle to late January of 2018, so I didn’t sign up for the exam or study for it immediately. This deployment was later cancelled, and all of a sudden it was a full go for the PE exam in April with study efforts beginning in February. I was told to take the exam even if I wasn’t ready for it so I could maybe pass it; or at least get a good feel for what would be on the exam. This is still great advice in my book. It helped work paid for it as well.
I prepared for the April 2018 exam with the NCEES practice exam, Graffeo, and Complex Imaginary 1-5. I worked through each and every problem in these books. After that I studied each book open to close over and over until the exam. I studied for maybe an hour or two a day and a little extra on weekends. I have two young children so the time I spent studying before work or during lunch was much better than the time I spent at home. I brought those three books along with the NEC and NESC to the exam. I finished the morning and afternoon sessions both an hour early and left thinking “I did my best and if I sit here longer, I won’t get anything more accomplished.” I failed with a 48, which I think was only a few questions away from passing. My weakest categories were electric power devices and protection; followed by an 8/12 on the Codes section. It was obvious that just practicing those simple problems over and over wasn’t going to be enough, and I felt I did really poorly on analytical questions. And even worse, I didn’t even have anything that would’ve helped me with answering those.
Immediately following the failing result, I felt invigorated and thought, how can I do better? I needed more books to learn the material, or be able to reference for screwball questions during the exam. I bought, Camara’s Spin Up, Engineering Pro Guides, Wildi’s Electric Machines, Electric Machine Fundamentals, Power System Analysis, and finally a month subscription to ElectricalPEReview.com
Exams
"Books"/Study Guides
Probs Close to Exam Style?
Camara
Easy
Graffeo
Meh
Camara
No
Complex Imaginary
Easy
Eng Pro Guides
Meh
Complex Imaginary
No
Graffeo
Easy
Elec PE Review
Loved
Graffeo
No
NCEES
Easy
Wildi
Loved
NCEES
Yes
Eng Pro Guides
Hard
Elec Machine Fund
Meh
Eng Pro Guides
Yes
Elec PE Review
Hard
Pwr Sys Analysis
Not Like
Elec PE Review
Yes
Wildi
Yes
Elec Machine Fund
No
Pwr Sys Analysis
No
I tried to give an overview of them above. Obviously, it is vague. Of course some of the books that had easy questions were good to study for the exam, but my analysis is an overall take. During the last few weeks before the exam I found myself solely studying with Wildi and Electrical PE Review and Engineering Pro Guides. My only complaint with Electrical PE Review is that it is very math heavy. I found myself at times getting caught up in it. Nearly every problem and solution contains a square root of 3 or +/- sign error. While this is important to study and on the exam, the math on the exam is fairly simple. Electrical PE Review is a little too math heavy in my opinion (compared to the exam).
During my studying I used Engineering Pro Guides cheat sheet - And added to it every day all day as I found fit.
Everyone is different, but I generally did not study by reading material. It was all basically doing sample problems. As many as I could find wherever I could find them. I did internet searches with “Power PE exam and .edu”. So colleges who had problems would pop up and I would look at them. I also liked to study a certain subject for a week or more then go to a new one instead of being all over the place.
(more to come)
I graduated in 2007 with a BS in EE and have been working since then in many different fields/jobs. I got into the electrical utility industry in 2016. I took the Electrical FE in December of 2017 and passed on my first try (studied off and on starting in August 2017). I didn’t have an issue submitting the paperwork to NY in order to sit for the PE exam, and was approved. The process of filling it out was not fun, but it’s hard to document your experience sometimes.
I was going to be deployed to Puerto Rico to help with restoration efforts in middle to late January of 2018, so I didn’t sign up for the exam or study for it immediately. This deployment was later cancelled, and all of a sudden it was a full go for the PE exam in April with study efforts beginning in February. I was told to take the exam even if I wasn’t ready for it so I could maybe pass it; or at least get a good feel for what would be on the exam. This is still great advice in my book. It helped work paid for it as well.
I prepared for the April 2018 exam with the NCEES practice exam, Graffeo, and Complex Imaginary 1-5. I worked through each and every problem in these books. After that I studied each book open to close over and over until the exam. I studied for maybe an hour or two a day and a little extra on weekends. I have two young children so the time I spent studying before work or during lunch was much better than the time I spent at home. I brought those three books along with the NEC and NESC to the exam. I finished the morning and afternoon sessions both an hour early and left thinking “I did my best and if I sit here longer, I won’t get anything more accomplished.” I failed with a 48, which I think was only a few questions away from passing. My weakest categories were electric power devices and protection; followed by an 8/12 on the Codes section. It was obvious that just practicing those simple problems over and over wasn’t going to be enough, and I felt I did really poorly on analytical questions. And even worse, I didn’t even have anything that would’ve helped me with answering those.
Immediately following the failing result, I felt invigorated and thought, how can I do better? I needed more books to learn the material, or be able to reference for screwball questions during the exam. I bought, Camara’s Spin Up, Engineering Pro Guides, Wildi’s Electric Machines, Electric Machine Fundamentals, Power System Analysis, and finally a month subscription to ElectricalPEReview.com
Exams
"Books"/Study Guides
Probs Close to Exam Style?
Camara
Easy
Graffeo
Meh
Camara
No
Complex Imaginary
Easy
Eng Pro Guides
Meh
Complex Imaginary
No
Graffeo
Easy
Elec PE Review
Loved
Graffeo
No
NCEES
Easy
Wildi
Loved
NCEES
Yes
Eng Pro Guides
Hard
Elec Machine Fund
Meh
Eng Pro Guides
Yes
Elec PE Review
Hard
Pwr Sys Analysis
Not Like
Elec PE Review
Yes
Wildi
Yes
Elec Machine Fund
No
Pwr Sys Analysis
No
I tried to give an overview of them above. Obviously, it is vague. Of course some of the books that had easy questions were good to study for the exam, but my analysis is an overall take. During the last few weeks before the exam I found myself solely studying with Wildi and Electrical PE Review and Engineering Pro Guides. My only complaint with Electrical PE Review is that it is very math heavy. I found myself at times getting caught up in it. Nearly every problem and solution contains a square root of 3 or +/- sign error. While this is important to study and on the exam, the math on the exam is fairly simple. Electrical PE Review is a little too math heavy in my opinion (compared to the exam).
During my studying I used Engineering Pro Guides cheat sheet - And added to it every day all day as I found fit.
Everyone is different, but I generally did not study by reading material. It was all basically doing sample problems. As many as I could find wherever I could find them. I did internet searches with “Power PE exam and .edu”. So colleges who had problems would pop up and I would look at them. I also liked to study a certain subject for a week or more then go to a new one instead of being all over the place.
(more to come)