I took and passed the April 2008 ME PE ,machine design depth. Here are a few tips I can give you...
1. Visit these boards frequently! Listen to those who have been there.
2. Study very broadly so you get a feel of all the material that will be on the test, and then begin fine tuning details toward the test date. Do not
study the morning material for a month and then put it aside for the last two months. You will forget it.
3. Use many different sources for study problems (MERM, six-minute solutions, NCEES study problems).
4. Do hundreds and hundreds of problems. Use the calculator you will be using for the exam at all times during preparation, even at work.
5. The key to passing the exam is doing well in the morning, or at least well enough to keep it within striking distance. If you bomb to morning,
you will not make up for it in the afternoon.
6. Do simulated timed exams (full 8 hour exams).
7. Be intimately familiar with MERM and come up with a good tabbing method and get very used to it.
8. Time is crucial. If you get hung up on a problem, move on and come back to it later. Don't get bogged down on 4-5 problems and spend an
hour on them, because it will be all over. The exam is very unforgiving if you don't have a good game plan. Practice working problems
stressed out.
9. Do not ignore engineering economics! I almost did and it would have cost me. At least spend a few hours going through the sample problems
in MERM the week of the exam.
10. Don't assume that everything will be in MERM. For the April 2008 machine design depth section, there were many problems that I could find
nothing about in MERM. Take many books even if you haven't looked at them. Some disagree with this, but I found answers to at least 2-3
problems in books that I really didn't study from.
11. Don't assume that the exam will be as easy as the NCEES practice exam. I thought it was significantly harder.
12. Don't bother indexing 100's of solved problems in the hopes of matching them up during the exam with actual test problems. You won't have
time and you will rarely find a problem close enough. I didn't do this and was glad I didn't. Wouldn't have helped.
13. Take the entire week of the test off from work if possible. Don't study the entire time but use it to collect resources, relax, etc. Get a small
luggage carrier to use to haul the books to the test.
14. Don't leave any detail unaccounted for. Where is the exam location, where will you park, what will you take for lunch, where are the
bathrooms, etc. Remember, you are preparing for 3-4 months for a 1 day event. No second chances! (Actually there will be more chances
at about 6-month intervals, with 3-4 months of study inbetween).
15. Do everything in your power to pass the test the first time. You will be basically sacrificing all your free time for the entire study period.
Don't plan on much of a social life for a while.
Study hard and good luck!