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1,001 questions about the ASTB (post your scores & ask your questions here!)

Took the ASTB-E for the first time this past Tuesday...and I feel that I am obligated to share my experience, as everyone's gouge helped me so much along the way. I do not plan on retaking the test.

Score: 55 7/8/8

MST: I was most worried about this section and therefore spent the most time studying it. Mainly studied the "OAR Math Study Guide" from Kyle's ASTB study kit, along with Barron's Book. Lots of probability questions, D R/T, multivariable equations, simplifying equations, geometry, and percentages. I don't remember everything I had, but study and you'll be fine.

RCT: Other than answering the 60 practice questions in Barron's book, I did not study for this section explicitly. Not bad, especially if you're a good writer/reader.

MCT: Lots of pulley, gear, MA, and simple machine questions. I studied a decent amount for this and was pleased with the outcome. This section was the shortest for me, kicking me out about halfway through.

PBM:

UAV: Did the compass trick...Averaged about 1.5-2.3 seconds per answer. It felt like they asked me 60 questions, but I'm not sure as I was preoccupied. Missed one...Seriously practice this one and you'll be fine..It was fun to tear through the questions.

Dichotic Listening: Leaned my head to each respective ear, worked well. Make sure that your headphones are working correctly as mine had an issue that needed to be addressed. I'm sure this could have effected my score had it not been corrected.

Simulator: If you can keep your crosshairs on the target at all times, you are a god. I felt like I was doing an awful job, but did not give up. I felt that tensing my shoulders and limiting my body movements to my wrists as much as possible benefited me. Just don't give up on this. When they introduce the dichotic listening during this segment it gets hectic....but don't give in.

Glad to be here. Thanks for the help gentlemen.
 
Hello everyone, this is my first time posting on here. I just took the OAR (academic portion of ASTB-E) and got a 70, thanks to the awesome airwarriors community. Here is my experience, I hope it is helpful. At the bottom of the post you will find a link to my google study drive. This is a HUGE collection of all the study materials I found on this thread, in one place (credits to Kyle, Patrick, and all the others who put together these materials).

Math:
Questions I got that I’d never seen before/did not practice well enough:
  • Log equations- I studied logarithm properties and how to simplify logs, but I did not study how to solve log equations. Know how to do this. My question was something like: log3 [log8(log5)]= -1. Answers were whole numbers.
  • Number sequences- I got a question like: “What is the sum of these numbers? 1,2,3,4,5……..123.” I had no idea how to solve it. Just a heads up to study this.
  • Complex weighted average word problem: I practiced weighted averages, but got a question that was pretty complicated: “Jane is in a class where the three test scores are worth 60% of her grade, homework is 10%, final exam is 30%. Her homework score is 82. Her first two test scores are 70 and 75, and her final exam is 10 points less than her third test score. Her average grade in the class is ___ (I can’t remember the exact number). What was her final exam score?”
  • Arcs and chords: “A chord of 4 inches cuts across a circle, with an arc of 90 degrees. What is the diameter of the circle?”
Just to reaffirm the other users’ comments on here, there will be probability, D=RT, averages (including weighted averages), and shared work word problems (I didn’t get any but I know mixture word problems are common as well). Practice these well. I got a book on amazon that was just for word problems, which helped a lot (“Algebra Word Problems by Chris McMullen”).

Mechanical:
Questions I remember:
  • “A spring is attached to a wall with a weight at the end. The spring’s starting point is at A before it is compressed and then let go. It bounces out to point C before returning to starting point A. At what point is its elastic energy the greatest?” Answers were different points where the spring would be closer or further away from the wall.
  • Pulleys, isothermal temperature (remains constant), the arc of a ball being thrown (horizontal vs. vertical acceleration)
  • “A boat is perpendicularly crossing a river at a given speed, the river is flowing down at a given speed, at what speed is the boat moving?”
Reading:
  • Take your time with each question. Read the prompt carefully. I read it at least 2 times to makes sure I understood the relationships between the topics or subjects discussed. If the prompt says “x is the main objective of y”, make sure that the answer you pick does not change or alter this relationship. It must be exactly how the prompt said it is.
About the actual test system:
What I wish I knew:
For the mechanical comprehension section, I’d say quantity over quality is best when studying. Meaning: look over as MUCH information as you possibly can. Read every study guide on the drive posted below. The questions I got seemed to be quite random, so just do your best to ingest as much as you can instead of going super in depth on any particular subject.
For both math and mechanical: look at the airwarriors threads and the posts like mine where people share their experience and specific questions they got. I saw questions from the airwarriors thread on my test that I would NOT have known if I had just studied the guides and books.
#1 thing to know: This test is adaptive. This means that timing is not as important as in a “regular” paper-based test. Focus on quality over quantity. Completing 15 questions and getting most of them right is much better than completing 25-30 and getting a bunch wrong. I did not count how many questions I answered on each section, but I highly doubt that I completed the “full” amount. Take your time. However, make an educated guess if you’re sure you won’t be able to solve the problem within a reasonable time frame. Educated guess= solve backwards, or just apply whatever clues you can from matching the answer set to the problem.
Order of the OAR: If you were wondering, the order is 1. Math, 2. Reading, 3. Mechanical.
What does it mean if I “time out” or get “kicked out”?: I timed out on all my sections except maybe for the mechanical comprehension section (I may have had 1 or 2 minutes left). This means that the test does NOT necessarily kick you out because you’re doing well. It seems to be somewhat random (i.e. people who do well sometimes time out, and people who don’t do as well sometimes get cut short).
You will feel like you’re failing: saw multiple questions (4-6) that I had never seen before, even though I studied hard. Don’t panic- just make an educated guess and move on. You will be surprised that you did better than you thought at the end.
Quality over quantity: The test would seem to give me easier questions after a hard question, which made me feel like I must have gotten the last one wrong. If this happens- be extra careful with the next question because the test is adaptive, so each question you get wrong will make the computer give you an easier question. You don’t want to have a trend of wrong answers that will lower your score. Focus on getting them RIGHT, not getting a bunch answered in the allotted time.
BEST study materials: The study drive below includes enough material to keep you busy for weeks. Do not waste your money buying guides and books. Use the study guides, practice tests, flashcards, and links on the drive and augment that with videos on Khan Academy and Youtube, as well as searching online for specific topics you may struggle with. If you must, buy the Barron's book for a basic overview.
P.S. You don’t need a watch. Hover your mouse over the clock on the screen to see how much time you have left.

GOOD LUCK!

 

madman111

SNA Pro-Rec Y
Hey guys,

First time posting, in fact just took my first ASTB today. I plan to retake because the overall score wasn't the best, but I think I lost a lot on the emergency procedure. I wrote down the steps for each emergency but I think in the stress of the moment I confused which side of the fuel and power bar was min, neutral, or high. Could someone help reorganize which color correlates with which? I've tried looking up online but there are very few people with this confusion so I'm hoping for the best here.

Thanks
 

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Jordheim

Member
Math:
Questions I got that I’d never seen before/did not practice well enough:

  • Number sequences- I got a question like: “What is the sum of these numbers? 1,2,3,4,5……..123.” I had no idea how to solve it. Just a heads up to study this.

for those who are looking to learn how to solve arithmetic series sums; here is a video for you. I found it quite useful and taught myself in about 20 minutes.


for the other problems. I don't know how to solve them.
 
Hey guys,

First time posting, in fact just took my first ASTB today. I plan to retake because the overall score wasn't the best, but I think I lost a lot on the emergency procedure. I wrote down the steps for each emergency but I think in the stress of the moment I confused which side of the fuel and power bar was min, neutral, or high. Could someone help reorganize which color correlates with which? I've tried looking up online but there are very few people with this confusion so I'm hoping for the best here.

Thanks

Happened to me as well. If i remember correctly, Red means Max....(Green Means Good) and Yellow is low. Red = 100% Green = 50% Yellow = 0% / LOW
 

Jordheim

Member
Hey everyone I took the OAR today and passed it, barely. I got a 41. As an English major who never had to go above simple algebra. I'm perfectly happy with my score. Math was never my strongest subject. I don't plan to retest being the old age of 33. Its either they accept me or they do not. I'll go back to being a high school teacher if they do not.


Math section.
I had a lot of probability questions. Some examples are, There are 15 students in a class: 8 boys and 7 girls. If the teacher picks a group of 4 at random, what is the probability that everyone in the group is a boy? This was almost identical to Khan academy. I would study his material for these. I also got questions like. You're the first person at a casino table; what is the probability of getting an Ace out of a single card deck? I also got the typical marble question. I had a lot of complex DRT questions that can be found on kuta software infinite algebra 2. To be clear, these were not the ones on Kyle's ASTB, they were much more difficult. Here is a example question: Jose left the airport and traveled toward the mountains. Kayla left 2.1 hours later traveling 35 mph faster in an effort to catch up to him. After 1.2 hours Kayla finally caught up. Find Jose's average speed. This is from kuta sotware infinite algebra 2. I had order of operations questions that were quite difficult. Similar to the #1 question found HERE. I also had about 3 questions on square roots that asked me to simplify variables. I had one on quadratic equations and matrices. After the matrices I was kicked out with about 14 minutes left. I only solved 12 questions. I did not have any word work related problems and fractions. I did have what is the ares of a circle based off the circumference alone, and disruptive property questions (X+2)(X-3) = ??? very easy. I did have a arithmetic sequence question where i had to use Sn= N/2 (A1+ AN). The hardest questions I had was Log X Log questions. I do apologize I don't remember the actual question, but it was similar to the ones found on Kyle's ASTB study guide. so I recommend studying logs.


Reading Section
This was the quite difficult for me even as an English major. I have an undergraduate degree in English and a masters in TESOL(teaching English as a Second Language). These paragraphs are utterly confusing and poorly written. Whoever wrote these paragraphs needs to go back to school and learn how to write a paragraph without adding a bunch of fluff. I felt like 90% of these paragraphs had useless information and it became a game to find the useful sentence in the paragraphs. . Do not under estimate this section. There were several sections that I could easily argue had 2 correct answers based on the wording and verbiage used in the paragraph. For those who know the test, the auditor general of the navy is one primary example. My strategy for this was to read the answers and then read the paragraph out loud and using the mouse arrow as a guide.

The Mechanical Section
I want to be very clear on this section. There were only two questions that related to Holly's ASTB study guide and Kyle's study guide. Gas related to temperature and how far a weight needed to be to counter-act a weight on the other side. That is it. I believe i got a 41 due to this. I utterly bombed this section as it it had nothing to do with Charles' laws, Boyle's Law, or Bernoulli's laws. I didn't have a single pulley, gear, buoyancy, thermodynamics, Speed or velocity questions, boat vs river current question, and I did not have a single MA question. I did have a lot of ohm's law questions which is vaguely covered in the study guides mentioned. The two questions I remember verbatim are: What is the resistance of this circuit given the picture displayed? And if the temperature is doubled and the pressure is increased, what is the volume of the gas? Did it remain the same? double or quadruple?


I wish everyone success.
 

Arkrunner

Member
Hello, AirWarriors. Long time lurker and honorary first-time poster. Today I took the ASTB and scored 56 7/8/7 which is above what I expected! I am very proud of this score because I worked very hard to know this material forward and backwards. You can do the same!!! I studied for two months total. At least one day a week I spent all day studying (8-10 hours) as well as every night after work. I work full time, workout, and am a socially normal person : ) for the most part. Here’s one of my mottos: work as hard as you can to be confident in your abilities when it is time to test. That goes for any test: academics, running a race, presentations at work, etc. Alrighty here goes my ASTB debrief:

Studying:
Get a notebook for every section of the test to keep yourself organized. If there is a concept you are struggling with: practice, sleep for a full night, repeat. Resources: Read through EVERY page of AW starting back to 200. Barron’s Military Flight Textbook. GRE math problems. Khan Academy. Pilot’s Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge. Check your local library for this and other aviation practice test booklets. YouTube channel about everything aviation: Captain Joe. Attached are resources from fellow AirWarriors.

Test Day:
The APEX system was not working when I arrived to the recruiting center!!!! Miraculously it started working a couple hours later. My recruiter said they often fix server issues such as these within a couple hours. That being said: bring snacks and earbuds to keep your brain astb-ready in case this happens to you. Every portion of the test had a time limit and I completed as many questions as possible. I was never “kicked out” at random times.

Math Portion: Timed 40 minutes (?)
Here’s the deal. I am TERRIBLE at math, but hit this one of out the park. How? “Work your weaknesses.” I devoted a great amount of time to focusing on these concepts and stressed myself to be overly prepared on test day. The below appeared on my test:
--Simplifying complex fractions
--Exponents and square roots
--Solve for nth number in a series
--Find the average test score: what is needed on the 6th and 7th tests if Johnny wants an 82 average in his class, and he scored x y z on the first three tests, scored 2/3 of the average of those three tests plus 20 on the 4th test, and made 9/10 of the 4th test on the 5th test?
--Probability: if a pair of dice is rolled and a playing card is selected, what are the odds of rolling a value that adds to 8, and the odds of you selecting a heart?
--Man hours
--D=RT
--No logs. No matrices. No geometry.

Reading: Timed 40 minutes (?)
Very boring. Yikes! No passages about aviation or anything interesting. I about lost it during this section. Read aloud to yourself to stay focused.

Mechanical: Timed 20 minutes (?)
--Density and pressure
--Pascal’s principle
--Bernouilli’s Principle
--Which temperature is greatest: values in Celsius, Fahrenheit & Kelvin. Know the conversion formula.
--Newton’s Laws and outer space
--Balance weight on a seesaw
--No pulleys! Note: a stationary pulley = MA of 1. Movable pulley = MA of 2.
--DC vs. AC batteries/generators. No pictures of circuit systems.
--Gears
--Elastic energy is increased in a stretched and compressed spring
--Acceleration of two objects toward the ground is the same because gravity is 9.8 m/sec^2 on ALL objects.
--Football player kicks ball in the Center of Gravity. How does the ball respond in the air?
--Isothermal energy: itt remains constant.

PBM/Flight Portion
ANIT: 15 Minutes
The section could cover anything and everything, so do your best with AW posts as a guide. Rent or purchase a Pilot’s textbook and study the chapters on flight instruments, flight controls, principles of flight, and airport operations, or navigate the attached Navy Airman Guide.
--Primary control systems
--TBF Avenger was the primary torpedo during WWII
--Parts of a ship
--Aviation squadron designations
--VFR: 0 to 179 degrees is odd thousands + 500. 180 to 359 is even thousands + 500.
--Forces in banking flight
--The AIM aeronautical manual contains content on ATC procedures
--If altitude increases, speed of sound decreases
--Weight of gasoline

UAV
Watch the YouTube video and practice until it is muscle memory. During the test, you will be given the heading on a spatial image. The parking lot you are to select will be given audibly. You will select the correct answer by moving the mouse pad and selecting the image. This section was more difficult than expected. I held my compass (draw the compass) in my left hand and navigated selection with my right hand. I missed 4 and averaged 2.5ish seconds. Did about 20 selections. Could have done better and nerves caught me.

BIRV
There are no good answers. Just do your best. Here is a humorous example of a difficult question that has no right answer:
  • I like to start rumors about my coworkers.
  • I steal from my deaf neighbor.
Throttle & Stick
  • Throttle and stick: I felt terrible during this portion. Didn’t line up the plane and crosshairs much. I thought “Well, this is it. Looks like I’ll be back in 31 days. My dreams are over!” Well, I scored a 7/8/7 so obviously I did well! Be confident in yourself. You are not garbage. The test is intentionally difficult. Here’s how to practice: buy a HOTAS or practice with a friend’s. Practice with an inverted Y axis. Free game to download and play: War Thunder.
  • Dichotic listening: do not get trigger happy like I did. Made a couple of mistakes by working too fast. There is a free phone application called “iDichotic” that will help you prepare for the listening portion layout, but frankly the app way more difficult than the actual test.
  • Dichotic listening, throttle and stick: I did surprising well during this portion. Focus on listening #1!
  • Emergency Procedures: write them down!!! There are three total. Do them accurately. The exact procedures are a few AW pages back.
DONE DONE AND DONE. Study hard and have confidence in your abilities. Take it from someone who works twice as hard because I am twice as slow at learning difficult concepts: You can do this.

ASTB 56 7/8/7
Applying: SNA

 

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Arkrunner

Member
Oh yeah, another resource I used: Podcasts. Through the Podcasts app on my iPhone I listen to:

--The Fighter Pilot Podcast with Vincent Aiello
--The Professionals Playbook with Justin Lee

These are great resources to get advice from military aviation professionals, as well as technical perspectives on airframes from the pilots themselves.
 
I'm totally confused by #42 from OAR Math Guide.docx in https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1AvPi5oH_h_13TGajDvflDWkftwXO8LS6

Yeah I know that two complementary angles sum to 90. It says the correct answer is "A: Complementary angles are two angles that equal 90º when added together."

71 + 90 is != 90. Am I misinterpreting something?

I recall seeing a question like this on my first test attempt.
I remember that question. It is wrong. There are a few in the study guides that are not correct.
 

nyynyg

Member
I would like to thank the earlier participants of this forum, as it was extremely helpful in my preparation for the ASTB. I am a recent college graduate with no aviation or military background and played a decent amount of video games when I was younger but would not consider myself a “gamer” in any sense. I took the test relatively recently and scored 69/9/8/9. While I did not initially plan on posting and most of what I have to say has more or less been stated in earlier posts, I feel obliged to detail my process and advice here considering how helpful this forum was to me.

Overall: I would say I began studying in earnest roughly 2-3 weeks before my exam. The number of hours per day varied considerably, however in the last week I studied rigorously and took a few days off of work to fully commit myself. While I tried to adequately prepare for every subtest, the ones that took up most of my study time were the Math, Mechanical, and ANIT portions. While how much studying is necessary/best varies by the individual, if you have made the decision that becoming a naval aviator is your truly your goal, I would advise erring on the side of “over-preparing”. My thought process was that I would rather look back and realize I studied more than I needed to than not prepare enough to get the necessary scores to be selected. I will also say that I was pleasantly surprised by how long each subtest took, I never felt like I was running out of time. Finally, I did not feel like I was doing especially well when I actually took the test, and was pleasantly surprised by my results, so if you feel as though you are not doing well do not be discouraged, keep doing your best, as you may only think you are doing worse than you actually are.

Test Day: All of this information will seem obvious/intuitive, but I think it is worth sharing. I made sure I got an adequate amount of sleep, stayed hydrated, and ate well in the two days before the exam. Around 9-10pm the night before, I stopped studying and made getting my mind into a relaxed, confident state the priority. I left for the exam quite early, to allow for possible traffic jams, car trouble, etc. I went to the bathroom just before the exam, and brought with me scratch paper, pens, water, snacks, tissues, a light jacket, and an analog watch, and made sure I had the proctor’s permission to have each item with me in the exam room. I also used the break period to stretch, walk around, go to the bathroom again, and do whatever was needed to stay in a constructive state of mind. Again, I am aware none of this advice seems especially insightful, but forgetting any one of them could potentially harm your results, so having a mental checklist like so can be helpful.

Study Materials: I will post the usefulness of the materials for each section in greater detail below. I have no prior aviation/flight sim experience, so I got a stick and throttle controller for my Xbox to get used to using such a controller, but honestly I did not use it that much and the controls in the exam are much bigger/heavier/clunky, so I would not consider this a necessity. Kyle’s guide (which I believe includes the Peterson’s materials) posted earlier in this forum is a godsend, probably the most useful of any one resource, and Barron’s prep book is also very useful. I also had Officer Candidate Tests for Dummies, which can also help but is clearly inferior to Barron’s if you only wish to purchase one book. For further information on specific information/concepts, plenty is available via quick, intuitive Youtube/Google searches.

Math: I majored in a social science in college, so even though I have generally been competent in STEM subjects throughout my education, it is certainly not my wheelhouse, so I studied this section rigorously to compensate. As posted by others, many of the preparation materials, such as Barron’s, are far too easy on this section. Kyle’s guide is generally more useful here. Concepts such as probability, exponents, logs, series, matrices, etc. were all areas that I needed to brush up on and were covered lightly if at all in some of the softer study materials. I would advise you to cover all of your bases in regards to both your theoretical understanding and being able to solve practice problems. When I found a subject to be especially tricky, searching for online resources, especially Khan Academy on Youtube, got me to where I believed I needed to be. While I was unsure of some of the problems on the actual test, I am sure that had I not been told that Barron’s, etc. were too soft and not done further preparation I would have gotten a significantly lower score.

Reading: My education background was relatively well-suited to this subtest, so I did not prepare for it as much as some of the others. I received no vocabulary questions, only inference. The material was, in fact, quite dry and Navy-specific, so reading some actual Navy materials that have been made available may be helpful in familiarizing yourself to the types of passages you will see here. I believe it is generally helpful to take the approach of taking the questions very literally (what are they actually saying as opposed to what are they alluding to). Practice tests in sources like Barron’s, etc. was how I did most of my preparation here.

Mechanical: Like the Math section, this subject is not my natural academic home so I studied for it quite a lot. Unlike the Math section, most of the widely-used study materials like Barron’s will prepare you pretty well, however again I would recommend using sources like Kyle’s guide. Cover areas like circuits, simple machines, basic physics/mechanical sciences, etc. Again, I used intuitive Google and Youtube searches if I felt like I needed further explanation on a particular concept. This subtest really is pretty straightforward, and unlike math I do not believe it runs the risk of certain, popular test materials leaving you largely unprepared. Build a strong theoretical understanding, execute the practice problems, and you should be fine.

ANIT: Again, I have no aviation/military background, so there was a lot I had to learn before the test. While there really is a lot of information out there to be potentially tested on, the good news is that this subtest measures “knowledge” not “aptitude”, so improvement here is quite attainable. I did not review the FAA materials, however I used Barron’s, Kyle’s guide, the ASTB Cram flashcards, and Google and Youtube searches if there was an area I felt like I needed additional explanation on. This, more than any other subtest, was where I thought I was getting killed, so if you think as you are doing poorly do not get discouraged, just do your best one question at a time.

NAFTI: This section takes an annoyingly long time, and some of the questions will definitely feel strange/uncomfortable. It is true that this is much less conventional than the earlier subtests and does not require substantial, traditional studying time, and the best piece of advice is to just answer the questions as honestly as possible. However, I actually think a little preparation could help here. Hopefully you have had the opportunity to meet/speak to some naval aviators or military personnel in general, and gotten a sense of how your specific character/personality can constructively fit into that larger community. What I did was just take a little time, certainly less than an hour, to undergo some personal reflection, and imagine that if there were an actual interview portion of this test, how I would want to present myself and what personal qualities I would want to emphasize (while still being truthful of course). Then, I tried to pick the responses that best conveyed those qualities.

UAV: I watched the Youtube video that was been posted several times in this forum, drew a compass rose, and practiced with some flashcards. If you do that, there will be absolutely no surprises on this subtest. I will say that while accuracy is obviously more important than speed, it would be hard for me to imagine that nearly every competitive applicant who adequately prepares does not get nearly every question right. Therefore, I would imagine most of the differentiation between potentially competitive applicants comes from speed, not accuracy. In other words, while accuracy is the most important thing here, speed is likely quite important too.

PBM: There is another Youtube video that has been posted earlier in the forum that does a good job of explaining what to expect in this subtest. I knew going into this one that it was going to feel hard, there were going to be moments where I felt was screwing up, so the most important thing was to stay calm, collected, and not to get discouraged, just keep doing as best as I could. You will also get some time between sections and some practice sections, which are very helpful if you use them to take a deep breath (literally and figuratively). The test will have you undergo a dichotic test of pressing the trigger/clutch when you hear even/odd numbers in the target ear, vertically track an airplane graphic with the throttle, and track a similar graphic across a 2-D field with the flight stick, and then combinations of those three. You will also have to undertake 3 emergency procedures while tracking with the throttle and flight stick. For the dichotic sections, I tilted my head in the direction of the target ear to give myself a mental cue. I also wrote down the emergency procedures on my scratch paper before the section that included them, which you will have plenty of time to do. During the sections that required me to do 2 or 3 of the tests at the same time, my priorities were 1. Dichotic/Emergency Procedures, 2. Flight Stick, 3. Throttle, though I still tried to do as best as I could on all three. The set up is right-handed and bigger/heavier than one might expect, so be mentally prepared for that if you are naturally left-handed and/or have skinny forearms like me. Again, I cannot emphasize enough how important staying calm and not getting discouraged is during this subtest; if I had to give just one piece of advice for the entire ASTB, it would be that.

BI-RV: Some of the materials out there still say this is part of the ASTB, however it was not given to me and I believe it is no longer part of the larger exam.


Sorry if this was excessively long, I wanted to be comprehensive. Again, study hard, get adequate rest, be calm and resilient during the test, and take it one question/section at a time and you will be fine. This forum was a true help to me in my preparation, so I am more than happy to answer questions people might have via a direct message. Best of luck to all who are preparing for this test and undertaking the larger process of becoming a military officer.
 

maowczykowski1

Active Member
hey man im having trouble getting both this and the UAV simulator working. would you might checking it out and seeing whats up? i would love to practice these for my upcoming test.
 
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