Just took my first ASTB attempt this morning! Here's how it went, my thoughts, and how I studied
OAR: 59
AQR: 8
PFAR: 8
FOFAR: 7
LCAC: 62
Math: Studied this part of the OAR the most by far. I studied logs, matrices, exponents, algebra, geometry, different types of DRT and work rate time, probability, etc. I got a couple probability questions, tons of algebra, some exponents, but no logs matrices or DRT/WRT. Got kicked out with 5' to spare.
Reading: Only studied a little bit on the ASTB prep app. Felt like the questions were similar except there wasn't a question prompt. You just read the statement and guess which answer choice is true based on the passage.
Mechanical: Only math I did was converting celsius to fahrenheit. Everything else was concept based. Studied simple machines, circuits, mechanical advantage, bernoulis and pascals principles, conservation of energy, newtons laws. Wasn't too hard but glad I studied these concepts.
ANIT: Studied this one as much as math and had some carryover from taking the air force officer qualifying test a few years back. If you know the forces of flight and control surfaces, that will take you far. But also had some basic ship terminology and stuff about communications with ATC such as when radio isn't working. Also studied airport markings and airspace but didn't have many questions about that. Did ask a few about some instruments in the cockpit and their functions.
I got kicked out of every section with a few minutes left so I was hopeful that meant I was doing well. the NATFI section definitely had me second guessing myself and like others said it can make you feel terrible about yourself. The test emphasized that choosing something negative doesn't mean you'd actually carry out that behavior or it describes you.
PBM: Updated jantzen sim and prep app made me feel completely prepared here. The dichotic listening matches that of the prep app, the jantzen sim is opposite. I highly recommend getting a HOTAS as I bought the X52 which my site uses so it felt the same as always. The tracking difficulty had a range as the target's speed shifted throughout. I practiced daily from medium all the way to hard difficulty. I did NOT use deadzones on my stick and neither does the test.
I was elated to see these scores and can't wait to see what's next! Onto medical now