I took all of the NETA magazine quizes from 2006 until the most recent and have been using them as a study guide this time. The only issue with that is you have to refer to the current tables for the correct answers on some of the questions. I have found a couple of questions that I know I have been missing that I thought were correct. I agree with you the frustration is not knowing if the answers you even feel you know are correct. I think after you submit the test and get a fail you should be able to go back and see what you missed and the correct answers. That way you would be able to review and actually see what you missed. Keep your head up, good luck and happy studying.
Originally Posted by
whiskers
Been there done that, 2 times failure and the last time I thought I aced it. Nope FAIL with a 390, better than the first time, 367.
I am going for my 3rd try and am not too enthusiastic about it. I have been a switch gear specialist and engineer, first with GE and then with another small engineering firm for 42 years and I thought I knew everything about switch gear testing or so I thought.
My beef with the test, there are so many questions IMHO that are irrelevant to actual switch gear servicing tasks. Why do I need to know the what type of connector goes on the end of a fiber optic cable or the makeup of a fiber optic cable, "Core", "Cladding" and "Buffer". Now I know.
I believe the the so-called bar chart indicating your strengths and weaknesses is very unhelpful since the question pool is so large. My biggest beef, is not knowing if the answers you selected were correct or not.
Warren Garber
Have a great day!