I am a first time taker and all in all, the test was about what I expected. I have been out of school for 1.5 years (stupid me for not taking this while I was still smart) and I studied for about a month, utilizing about two hours a day and felt pretty confident both before and after the exam. On the drive home I know I made a stupid mistake on one of the AM problems *slams palm on forehead* and had to guess on a total of about 10 (mainly probability and stats). After my initial run through of answering the easier ones, I counted them all and got 62; made a second run through with the harder ones that required opening and searching the reference manual and had 10 left unanswered. Not too painful, just would not want to repeat it at all.
The Civil PM section was an interesting story to say the least. I knew how to answer a lot of them and am left with just a few questions lingering in my head. Some of the structural problems were very conceptual, which I normally do not have a problem with, but caught me off guard a few times. I was expecting to have to crunch some hard core numbers like I did in school, I mean hell, my college exams consisted of four problems and I had two hours to do them, using every second right up until the "pencils down" statements. During the drive home I had a heated debate with a friend on a few questions but in the end, I still feel confident I am right. A few of the problem were very tricky in that if you did a poor unit analysis, you were doomed from the get go.
Here is the one complaint I have and am still rather bothered by: one of the afternoon questions honestly had more than one correct answer. Two of the answers were a correct answer and which one to choose had a lot more to do with the budget associated with the project rather than the ethical background; hopefully this question was not the tipping point for my passing. There were two other questions that I could argue two of the four answers as being correct which both makes me a little worried but a little more confident at the same time; it shows me that I actually stopped and read all the answers and thought logically through the exam. The time was never an issue for me, I made it through the morning and afternoon section with enough time to spare to go back and revisit some that I was not so sure of my answers on (finding a mistake too). I am one that could re-read every question ten times and re-work a problem six ways to sunday which I am glad I did not have enough time to do. I tend to answer a question and then think about it too much, almost over analyzing a simple problem and am tempted to change my answer (theoretical problems apply here; plug and chug numbers are do it once, get the answer and then re-do it only focusing on units).
To wrap up my total experience, it was neither good nor bad. It is just another exam and I feel confident enough that I passed but a fail would not be the end of the world either. It seems in all honesty that the worst part of this whole exam process was/is going to be the waiting for the results, letting the little questions you had at the end of the day fester and grow into confidence/soul eating monsters by the time the 8 to 12 weeks passes by. I mean we are all engineers here and taking an exam written/graded by engineers. Someone should have been able to streamline the process a little more.
Why not just bring a scantron computer to the test site and scan it then? Give a first run score that may be subject to change after review? I know I surely will not be able to forget about the exam and move on with life until I have the results in hand.
Here is an interesting side note that I want to share: I took the exam with the notion that a lot of people fail based upon what I have found while searching online but I think a lot of people need to remember that the online information is heavily skewed. People who fail the exam come back online and post their failing attempts and say how hard it was. The people who passed their first time just move on with their lives and leave this test in the dust; never to post online anywhere how the exam really was. When I typed "F.E. Exam Stories" into Google I was led to hellish recounts of near impossible exams. This is surely not how the exam is for everyone and I think more people need to remember this. My nerves were racing as I was sitting down with the pencil in hand, ready to crack the seal on the booklet. I thought I was going to open it and see the blood of christ spill all over the exam table based upon some stories I read. Just remember, all the questions have a solution and somewhere in the 200 page reference manual you will find it. (The Index was my savior at the end of the book).