• Please take a moment and update your account profile. If you have an updated account profile with basic information on why you are on Air Warriors it will help other people respond to your posts. How do you update your profile you ask?

    Go here:

    Edit Account Details and Profile

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

elariosa95

SNA (Primary - VT-6)
Just took my test yesterday, and wow I know people have talked about bad testing experiences, but it was a joke. I got kicked out of the test multiple times, was using a 15inch laptop screen (that wasn't even big enough for proper PBM) and they almost turned me away once I got to the PBM because they didn't have Mozilla Firefox (which is apparently the only browser the PBM works with). All of this after I drove 3.5 hours to one of the closest testing locations. Griping aside I scored lower than I wanted with a 55/6/4/6. While the 4 alone currently DQ's me from Naval Aviator, I was wondering if my AQR and FOFAR were high enough for decent chances at NFO? My college GPA was a 3.9 with a B.S.B.A in Computer Information Systems (from an honors college if that matters). I'm considering taking the test a second time now that I've got a grasp on it, and my biggest failure of the test was PBM tracking because I had done some home practice with x52 HOTAS but non-inverted (idiot I know) so I essentially trained myself to track backwards from the test. All advice on my next steps is appreciated!
Now that you have some experience with the test under your belt, I'd definitely recommend taking it again. The rule of thumb used to be that all 7s is competitive - and it still is to a degree - but higher scores obviously give you a better chance.

As for next steps, definitely practice the sim again with the right controls haha. Study up on what you struggled with the most, but don't ignore the stuff you did well on. You don't have to practice/study for hours on end, but at least do it once a day to build up the habit.

There's plenty of great study material and tips on here, so feel free to dig around if you have some time.
 

2bbknack

Member
Just retook and scored a 61 8/9/7. I'll skip some stuff because I already covered everything in my post regarding my first attempt, but BLUF is that there is no secret - the more you study and prepare, the better your scores will be. If you are a student, I highly recommend waiting to take it towards the end of your summer/winter break, and using that time off to dedicate to this test. As a student on break, I was able to dedicate 4-6 hours of prep time 6 days a week for about 2.5 weeks. From the info I found, your math scores most significantly influence the AQR, and your ANIT score most significantly influences the PFAR. Therefore, 1.5 hours each day was dedicated towards focusing on the math concepts I was least confident in. Another 1 hour or so was spent studying for the ANIT. The remaining 1-3 hours was spent on everything else, usually practicing jantsen's sim with the X52 and some light reading and mechanical review.

Math - Got a couple probability, percents, algebraic simplification, exponential and geometry questions. You should try to answer each question as quickly and accurately as possible, but I think there is an emphasis on accurate. While I answered most questions in under a minute, they started to get pretty hard pretty quickly. For one problem, it took me 2 minutes or so to even comprehend what was being asked, and then another 2 minutes or so to do the math because it was a tough one. I remember the final answer being in percents despite my math giving me a pretty complex fraction, something like 33/507 or something. So being able to convert a fraction that complicated to the nearest percent is something you should be able to do. Point being, if it takes you a while to figure out a problem- don't freak out. Both times I've taken the test it kicked me out before the time was up. That means I could've spent more time on problems I skipped because I didn't think I could've finished them in a reasonable amount of time. The hard problems that take a while are there to test you, and I think if you get a couple hard ones right you will get a better score than getting a bunch of medium questions right and guessing on the hard ones.

ANIT - I remember about 30-40% of these were Naval questions instead of aviation related, so don't sleep on those naval flashcards! One question was how much AVGAS would you need to dump if you are x lbs overweight, so know AVGAS weighs 6 lbs/gal. Know your runway/taxiway light colors. I think there was one on flight heading for a given altitude. I wish I remembered more specifics but I don't. I'll link the flashcards I used to study below. I also continued work on my PPL, so while I didn't review FAR/AIM too much, you really should if you haven't. Start with the important chapters outlined in Kyle's guide.

PBM - If the OAR app is good for anything, its the UAV portion (the rest of the app is kinda dogshit, lot of spelling errors and incorrect answers on the tests. Use the google drives for everything else). I didn't use the compass trick and while I missed 3 or 4 on the UAV I answered most in under 2 seconds. For the PBM, you have to invest time into it. Practice Jantsenz's every single day. Keep track of your scores each session in an excel sheet and average them out, I noticed the scores kept getting better and better every day, and that boosted the shit out of my confidence. Using the same setup as described in my last post (I think monitor resolution and framerate effect the scores the sim give), I was able to get my average down to about 100/80 for stick/throttle the night before the test on the hardest difficulty. Real thing was maybe medium difficulty. You can practice dichotic listening by binding the thumb button on the throttle to odds and trigger on the stick to evens, which is same as the test. Since the sim only gives odds in one ear and evens in the other, just flip your headphones around each time so you get used to either odds or evens in both ears. Regarding emergency procedures, hypothetically speaking listen to what flyinggamecock said in the past couple of pages...... hypothetically. If you are looking for motivation while you practice, look up these historical aviation music videos that are pretty popular right now.

I'm going to repeat it because its really just that simple and important, you need to study and practice as much as you can. I'm an engineering student between semesters, so I could spent the majority of my time prepping for 2.5 weeks. I'm going to sound like a massive douche here, but if you aren't great at math, or you don't know anything about aviation, you need to study more than me. If you work 8 hours a day and can only study for an hour before bed, you need to plan on studying more than a couple weeks out. You need to grind. If this seems like a daunting amount of time, just know you can do it! Think about how badly you want it. Learn to push yourself now, because when you get into the military you will push yourself every day. You need to go into it feeling confident. If you are testing tomorrow and you don't, consider asking your recruiter to push it back a month. Remember, you only get 3 chances at this. Good luck, and thanks for everyone in this thread who helped me!

Kyle's drive: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1AvPi5oH_h_13TGajDvflDWkftwXO8LS6
Gomez' drive: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1IxIizps2bu2ljw1bYjFPajWv8RYvLWyv
Some ANIT flashcard sets: https://quizlet.com/64521796/astb-aviationnautical-information-flash-cards/?x=1jqt
https://www.cram.com/flashcards/mem...l-information-test-anit-comprehensive-4718163

One last tip - this last board was brutal. If you wanted SNA, you didn't get it without a 9 somewhere. Idk if it will get less competitive any time soon (probably not, sounds like the pipeline is pretty backed up), but if you want success you should aim for the fucking moon. Look at these results every day before you start studying to remind yourself you need to ball the fuck out on this test if you want success. Good luck
 
Last edited:
Just retook and scored a 61 8/9/7. I'll skip some stuff because I already covered everything in my post regarding my first attempt, but BLUF is that there is no secret - the more you study and prepare, the better your scores will be. If you are a student, I highly recommend waiting to take it towards the end of your summer/winter break, and using that time off to dedicate to this test. As a student on break, I was able to dedicate 4-6 hours of prep time 6 days a week for about 2.5 weeks. From the info I found, your math scores most significantly influence the AQR, and your ANIT score most significantly influences the PFAR. Therefore, 1.5 hours each day was dedicated towards focusing on the math concepts I was least confident in. Another 1 hour or so was spent studying for the ANIT. The remaining 1-3 hours was spent on everything else, usually practicing jantsen's sim with the X52 and some light reading and mechanical review.

Math - Got a couple probability, percents, algebraic simplification, exponential and geometry questions. You should try to answer each question as quickly and accurately as possible, but I think there is an emphasis on accurate. While I answered most questions in under a minute, they started to get pretty hard pretty quickly. For one problem, it took me 2 minutes or so to even comprehend what was being asked, and then another 2 minutes or so to do the math because it was a tough one. I remember the final answer being in percents despite my math giving me a pretty complex fraction, something like 33/507 or something. So being able to convert a fraction that complicated to the nearest percent is something you should be able to do. Point being, if it takes you a while to figure out a problem- don't freak out. Both times I've taken the test it kicked me out before the time was up. That means I could've spent more time on problems I skipped because I didn't think I could've finished them in a reasonable amount of time. The hard problems that take a while are there to test you, and I think if you get a couple hard ones right you will get a better score than getting a bunch of medium questions right and guessing on the hard ones.

ANIT - I remember about 30-40% of these were Naval questions instead of aviation related, so don't sleep on those naval flashcards! One question was how much AVGAS would you need to dump if you are x lbs overweight, so know AVGAS weighs 6 lbs/gal. Know your runway/taxiway light colors. I think there was one on flight heading for a given altitude. I wish I remembered more specifics but I don't. I'll link the flashcards I used to study below. I also continued work on my PPL, so while I didn't review FAR/AIM too much, you really should if you haven't. Start with the important chapters outlined in Kyle's guide.

PBM - If the OAR app is good for anything, its the UAV portion (the rest of the app is kinda dogshit, lot of spelling errors and incorrect answers on the tests. Use the google drives for everything else). I didn't use the compass trick and while I missed 3 or 4 on the UAV I answered most in under 2 seconds. For the PBM, you have to invest time into it. Practice Jantsenz's every single day. Keep track of your scores each session in an excel sheet and average them out, I noticed the scores kept getting better and better every day, and that boosted the shit out of my confidence. Using the same setup as described in my last post (I think monitor resolution and framerate effect the scores the sim give), I was able to get my average down to about 100/80 for stick/throttle the night before the test on the hardest difficulty. Real thing was maybe medium difficulty. You can practice dichotic listening by binding the thumb button on the throttle to odds and trigger on the stick to evens, which is same as the test. Since the sim only gives odds in one ear and evens in the other, just flip your headphones around each time so you get used to either odds or evens in both ears. Regarding emergency procedures, hypothetically speaking listen to what flyinggamecock said in the past couple of pages...... hypothetically. If you are looking for motivation while you practice, look up these historical aviation music videos that are pretty popular right now.

I'm going to repeat it because its really just that simple and important, you need to study and practice as much as you can. I'm an engineering student between semesters, so I could spent the majority of my time prepping for 2.5 weeks. I'm going to sound like a massive douche here, but if you aren't great at math, or you don't know anything about aviation, you need to study more than me. If you work 8 hours a day and can only study for an hour before bed, you need to plan on studying more than a couple weeks out. You need to grind. If this seems like a daunting amount of time, just know you can do it! Think about how badly you want it. Learn to push yourself now, because when you get into the military you will push yourself every day. You need to go into it feeling confident. If you are testing tomorrow and you don't, consider asking your recruiter to push it back a month. Remember, you only get 3 chances at this. Good luck, and thanks for everyone in this thread who helped me!

Kyle's drive: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1AvPi5oH_h_13TGajDvflDWkftwXO8LS6
Gomez' drive: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1IxIizps2bu2ljw1bYjFPajWv8RYvLWyv
Some ANIT flashcard sets: https://quizlet.com/64521796/astb-aviationnautical-information-flash-cards/?x=1jqt
https://www.cram.com/flashcards/mem...l-information-test-anit-comprehensive-4718163

One last tip - this last board was brutal. If you wanted SNA, you didn't get it without a 9 somewhere. Idk if it will get less competitive any time soon (probably not, sounds like the pipeline is pretty backed up), but if you want success you should aim for the fucking moon. Look at these results every day before you start studying to remind yourself you need to ball the fuck out on this test if you want success. Good luck
Do you have any good resources besides the ones listed for improvements on probability and percentages that were most similar to the questions you had on the test? I think the probability questions are what got me the last time mainly.
 

2bbknack

Member
Do you have any good resources besides the ones listed for improvements on probability and percentages that were most similar to the questions you had on the test? I think the probability questions are what got me the last time mainly.
Maybe just your old algebra textbook if you still have it? I seem to remember a question involving the prob of both getting a specific dice roll and drawing an ace or something like that out of a deck of cards. The probability resources in Kyles are honestly a little overkill compared to what I got, so if you can do those you should be good. I don't know of any other resources for percentages, but if you can do the percentage problems in those drives you should be good.
 

Biff42

Well-Known Member
Just retook and scored a 61 8/9/7. I'll skip some stuff because I already covered everything in my post regarding my first attempt, but BLUF is that there is no secret - the more you study and prepare, the better your scores will be. If you are a student, I highly recommend waiting to take it towards the end of your summer/winter break, and using that time off to dedicate to this test. As a student on break, I was able to dedicate 4-6 hours of prep time 6 days a week for about 2.5 weeks. From the info I found, your math scores most significantly influence the AQR, and your ANIT score most significantly influences the PFAR. Therefore, 1.5 hours each day was dedicated towards focusing on the math concepts I was least confident in. Another 1 hour or so was spent studying for the ANIT. The remaining 1-3 hours was spent on everything else, usually practicing jantsen's sim with the X52 and some light reading and mechanical review.

Math - Got a couple probability, percents, algebraic simplification, exponential and geometry questions. You should try to answer each question as quickly and accurately as possible, but I think there is an emphasis on accurate. While I answered most questions in under a minute, they started to get pretty hard pretty quickly. For one problem, it took me 2 minutes or so to even comprehend what was being asked, and then another 2 minutes or so to do the math because it was a tough one. I remember the final answer being in percents despite my math giving me a pretty complex fraction, something like 33/507 or something. So being able to convert a fraction that complicated to the nearest percent is something you should be able to do. Point being, if it takes you a while to figure out a problem- don't freak out. Both times I've taken the test it kicked me out before the time was up. That means I could've spent more time on problems I skipped because I didn't think I could've finished them in a reasonable amount of time. The hard problems that take a while are there to test you, and I think if you get a couple hard ones right you will get a better score than getting a bunch of medium questions right and guessing on the hard ones.

ANIT - I remember about 30-40% of these were Naval questions instead of aviation related, so don't sleep on those naval flashcards! One question was how much AVGAS would you need to dump if you are x lbs overweight, so know AVGAS weighs 6 lbs/gal. Know your runway/taxiway light colors. I think there was one on flight heading for a given altitude. I wish I remembered more specifics but I don't. I'll link the flashcards I used to study below. I also continued work on my PPL, so while I didn't review FAR/AIM too much, you really should if you haven't. Start with the important chapters outlined in Kyle's guide.

PBM - If the OAR app is good for anything, its the UAV portion (the rest of the app is kinda dogshit, lot of spelling errors and incorrect answers on the tests. Use the google drives for everything else). I didn't use the compass trick and while I missed 3 or 4 on the UAV I answered most in under 2 seconds. For the PBM, you have to invest time into it. Practice Jantsenz's every single day. Keep track of your scores each session in an excel sheet and average them out, I noticed the scores kept getting better and better every day, and that boosted the shit out of my confidence. Using the same setup as described in my last post (I think monitor resolution and framerate effect the scores the sim give), I was able to get my average down to about 100/80 for stick/throttle the night before the test on the hardest difficulty. Real thing was maybe medium difficulty. You can practice dichotic listening by binding the thumb button on the throttle to odds and trigger on the stick to evens, which is same as the test. Since the sim only gives odds in one ear and evens in the other, just flip your headphones around each time so you get used to either odds or evens in both ears. Regarding emergency procedures, hypothetically speaking listen to what flyinggamecock said in the past couple of pages...... hypothetically. If you are looking for motivation while you practice, look up these historical aviation music videos that are pretty popular right now.

I'm going to repeat it because its really just that simple and important, you need to study and practice as much as you can. I'm an engineering student between semesters, so I could spent the majority of my time prepping for 2.5 weeks. I'm going to sound like a massive douche here, but if you aren't great at math, or you don't know anything about aviation, you need to study more than me. If you work 8 hours a day and can only study for an hour before bed, you need to plan on studying more than a couple weeks out. You need to grind. If this seems like a daunting amount of time, just know you can do it! Think about how badly you want it. Learn to push yourself now, because when you get into the military you will push yourself every day. You need to go into it feeling confident. If you are testing tomorrow and you don't, consider asking your recruiter to push it back a month. Remember, you only get 3 chances at this. Good luck, and thanks for everyone in this thread who helped me!

Kyle's drive: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1AvPi5oH_h_13TGajDvflDWkftwXO8LS6
Gomez' drive: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1IxIizps2bu2ljw1bYjFPajWv8RYvLWyv
Some ANIT flashcard sets: https://quizlet.com/64521796/astb-aviationnautical-information-flash-cards/?x=1jqt
https://www.cram.com/flashcards/mem...l-information-test-anit-comprehensive-4718163

One last tip - this last board was brutal. If you wanted SNA, you didn't get it without a 9 somewhere. Idk if it will get less competitive any time soon (probably not, sounds like the pipeline is pretty backed up), but if you want success you should aim for the fucking moon. Look at these results every day before you start studying to remind yourself you need to ball the fuck out on this test if you want success. Good luck
Do you remember which directions you had to turn the I and E knobs for the EPs?

Btw congratulations on your scores, and thank you for the insight?
 

2bbknack

Member
Do you remember which directions you had to turn the I and E knobs for the EPs?

Btw congratulations on your scores, and thank you for the insight?
I dont remember specific order, but some combination of all the way in either direction and a neutral position halfway in between. The X52 has a little notch you can feel when you are exactly halfway
 

elariosa95

SNA (Primary - VT-6)
Do you remember which directions you had to turn the I and E knobs for the EPs?
The directions right before the section will tell you which direction to turn the knobs for each procedure. It is HIGHLY recommended that you write down the configurations for each procedure.
 

rickmd

Member
Took the ASTB for the first time today scores: 66/8/6/7. Background: Biomedical Sciences major, 3.56 GPA, 26yr old civilian & grew up as a military brat. Was originally pre-med but decided to go down Aviation or Intel route - no aviation/flight background.

VPN/internet went out a few times along with a noisy testing area - get use to testing with some ambient/white noise.

Math: I was cut off doing approximately 16 questions, with around 17 minutes remaining. Probabilities: (1st dice rolling odd, 2nd rolling odd again), know probability notations and their written forms (X given Y, X or/and Y). Log/Natural Logs/Exponent Rules: Got a few questions with dragged out variables ex: -x(x^2(-x+5)^4)/(x^-2) = ? Geometry Heavy: (Areas of trapezoids, given (x,y) & (x2,y2) what is the area/perimeter/surface area/volume (square, triangle, rectangle, etc), given Surface Area formula for Sphere and Volume of Sphere, what is the circumference?

RCT: I was cut off here with 2 minutes left. No idea on the amount of questions. Same thing as everyone stated, not too bad, just a lot of distractions and internet going down. Threw me off track causing me to have to regain focus.

MCT: No idea on the amount of questions, I ran to full time. Some tricky questions here, understanding concepts is most important. Lever/fulcrum heavy (balance F1D1=F2D2) know how to balance a lever given 2 forces/weights/loads on 1 side and how much force or how far from the effort end of things. Pulleys, a question about how far will a moveable pulley move compared to a fixed. New one for me: If a SPRING replaces a FIXED PULLEY in a 2-pulley (Originally a fixed and a moveable, with a MA=2) system, will you have to use more force, less or the same to lift the box? Conductivity: What conditions need to be meet for Superconductivity? - Ans: To be super cold. 2x questions with examples of conduction vs convection - know the difference, what makes a good vs. bad, liquid/gas or solid? Heat transfer idea etc... Obscure Question: Given 3 pipes under water, H height, which feels the greatest pressure (L shaped, normal pipe but slanted, and a weird non-right angle E looking pipe).

ANIT: Cut off with 3ish minutes left. AVGAS question, know lbs/ga for Gas, Oil, Water. If "x" overweight, how much do you need to dump. How to roll/pitch/yaw AC and stabilities about those axis. Question about Airspace and needing a rating for X airspace (note, know altitudes/ceilings for each, speed limits, ratings needed, VFR requirements), Tetrahedron question, what way is wind blowing. Nautical terms - what's a "Beam and a Fantail," buoys headed in-land (RED RIGHT NUN EVEN, GREEN LEFT CAN ODD).

PBM: Eh, missed 2 on UAV. I should've trusted my gut and not used the compass trick. ***Do what YOU are comfortable doing and keep it consistent with how you studied. Also since I was looking for this info as well, it does follow the orders the procedures were given: FIRE -> ENGINE -> PROP: Please pay attention to your procedures and read and re-read to see if its TRUE for you. FIRE (0% E-knob, 0% I-knob, Clutch), ENGINE (100% E, 100% I, Clutch), PROP (50% E, 100% I, Clutch).

End all be all - big sad about that ugly 6 damn it
 
Last edited:

rickmd

Member
Do you remember which directions you had to turn the I and E knobs for the EPs?

Btw congratulations on your scores, and thank you for the insight?
For me and in order (please make sure to confirm with calibrations/stick/throttle used for you)

1. Fire (CCW to 0% E-Knob, CCW to 0% I-Knob, Clutch)
2. Engine (CW to 100% E-Knob, CW to 100% I-Knob, Clutch)
3. Prop (50% E-Knob, 100% I-Knob, Clutch)

I preset Fire inputs before the test started, pressed clutch as soon as "warning" was said on headset. From there I adjusted for Engine, and from there to Prop. Verbal cues are used and you have some time between to adjust as your flying.

You also have 2 gauges at the bottom right of your screen for High, Medium, Low. For Prop 50% on E-Knob, if your unsure, just look to hover medium.
 

unstoppable

New Member
Took the ASTB for the first time today scores: 66/8/6/7. Background: Biomedical Sciences major, 3.56 GPA, 26yr old civilian & grew up as a military brat. Was originally pre-med but decided to go down Aviation or Intel route.

VPN/internet went out a few times along with a noisy testing area - get use to testing with some ambient/white noise.

Math: I was cut off doing approximately 16 questions, with around 17 minutes remaining. Probabilities: (1st dice rolling odd, 2nd rolling odd again), know probability notations and their written forms (X given Y, X or/and Y). Log/Natural Logs/Exponent Rules: Got a few questions with dragged out variables ex: -x(x^2(-x+5)^4)/(x^-2) = ? Geometry Heavy: (Areas of trapezoids, given (x,y) & (x2,y2) what is the area/perimeter/surface area/volume (square, triangle, rectangle, etc), given Surface Area formula for Sphere and Volume of Sphere, what is the circumference?

RCT: I was cut off here with 2 minutes left. No idea on the amount of questions. Same thing as everyone stated, not too bad, just a lot of distractions and internet going down. Threw me off track causing me to have to regain focus.

MCT: No idea on the amount of questions, I ran to full time. Some tricky questions here, understanding concepts is most important. Lever/fulcrum heavy (balance F1D1=F2D2) know how to balance a lever given 2 forces/weights/loads on 1 side and how much force or how far from the effort end of things. Pulleys, a question about how far will a moveable pulley move compared to a fixed. New one for me: If a SPRING replaces a FIXED PULLEY in a 2-pulley (Originally a fixed and a moveable, with a MA=2) system, will you have to use more force, less or the same to lift the box? Conductivity: What conditions need to be meet for Superconductivity? - Ans: To be super cold. 2x questions with examples of conduction vs convection - know the difference, what makes a good vs. bad, liquid/gas or solid? Heat transfer idea etc... Obscure Question: Given 3 pipes under water, H height, which feels the greatest pressure (L shaped, normal pipe but slanted, and a weird non-right angle E looking pipe).

ANIT: Cut off with 3ish minutes left. AVGAS question, know lbs/ga for Gas, Oil, Water. If "x" overweight, how much do you need to dump. How to roll/pitch/yaw AC and stabilities about those axis. Question about Airspace and needing a rating for X airspace (note, know altitudes/ceilings for each, speed limits, ratings needed, VFR requirements), Tetrahedron question, what way is wind blowing. Nautical terms - what's a "Beam and a Fantail," buoys headed in-land (RED RIGHT NUN EVEN, GREEN LEFT CAN ODD).

PBM: Eh, missed 2 on UAV. I should've trusted my gut and not used the compass trick. ***Do what YOU are comfortable doing and keep it consistent with how you studied. Also since I was looking for this info as well, it does follow the orders the procedures were given: FIRE -> ENGINE -> PROP: Please pay attention to your procedures and read and re-read to see if its TRUE for you. FIRE (0% E-knob, 0% I-knob, Clutch), ENGINE (100% E, 100% I, Clutch), PROP (50% E, 100% I, Clutch).

End all be all - big sad about that ugly 6 damn itwh

what did you to study for the math section? can you please link what you use to study if you don't mind?
 

rickmd

Member
what did you to study for the math section? can you please link what you use to study if you don't mind?
Oh geez, I cannot find the link but the Gomez Study Guide, where ever that link is at, is what I used for practice exams and the collective gouges they have on there.


EDIT: Scroll down a bit, look for "Erichd" post with all the attachments :)

I used Youtube (Mario's Math Tutoring) - a bald dude, great videos, and KhanAcademy for concepts in Math and Physics I had a hard time with (probabilities, computations, permutations, log/exponent rules)
 
Last edited:

Biff42

Well-Known Member
For me and in order (please make sure to confirm with calibrations/stick/throttle used for you)

1. Fire (CCW to 0% E-Knob, CCW to 0% I-Knob, Clutch)
2. Engine (CW to 100% E-Knob, CW to 100% I-Knob, Clutch)
3. Prop (50% E-Knob, 100% I-Knob, Clutch)

I preset Fire inputs before the test started, pressed clutch as soon as "warning" was said on headset. From there I adjusted for Engine, and from there to Prop. Verbal cues are used and you have some time between to adjust as your flying.

You also have 2 gauges at the bottom right of your screen for High, Medium, Low. For Prop 50% on E-Knob, if your unsure, just look to hover medium.
Is this farily accurate then for the EPs? Someone posted this a while back. Just asking cause it seems that 100% if different for the i and e knobs (as in which way you turn). Just asking cause first time i took the teat I completely botched this portion! Thank you.
 

Attachments

  • EF547A22-4BB0-450C-BE89-F2C226B02897.jpeg
    EF547A22-4BB0-450C-BE89-F2C226B02897.jpeg
    323.2 KB · Views: 66

rickmd

Member
Is this farily accurate then for the EPs? Someone posted this a while back. Just asking cause it seems that 100% if different for the i and e knobs (as in which way you turn). Just asking cause first time i took the teat I completely botched this portion! Thank you.
Pretty close, how my throttle and E/I knobs were calibrated, counterclockwise rotation brought each respective gauge to 0.

Knob locations and how throttle is set up is correct, just pay attention to the initial calibration portions to cross-check which ways you spin the dials for 100% or 0%, jot these down on paper your given along with any other instructions/procedures your unclear about.

Clutch is in the center of the I-knob, as pictured.

Make sure to have a piece of paper for PBM. I personally wrote down Odd Left Clutch, Right Even Trigger in case I brain farted. My pieces of blank scratch paper was all piled under my used papers from the Math/MCT and almost all got thrown away before starting PBM. Silly thing that could be overlooked but might as well spit it all out there incase anyone has a similar experience.
 
Top