Good afternoon Shipmates and Friends,
This is my first time posting - at least that I remember. I am an active AWF1 P-3C/EP-3 Flight Engineer out of NAS Whidbey and have just finished my degree and am polishing up my package for submission - hopefully for the first board of this fiscal year!
I wanted to post and let others know what I thought of the (allegedly dreaded) ASTB-E.
FIRST OFF - if you are dreading the ASTB-E or stressing about it, DON'T! Please.. You are wasting energy.
I would also like to state that I am a Private Pilot and that only really helped me with the Aeronautical Science related questions. I also have a degree in airplane stuff, so that helps.
Ok, here we go:
Math Skills
40 minutes or so of pretty basic math, gets harder as you go. I completed maybe 18-22 questions in the time limit - I focused on being correct, rather than answering a ton. Lots of different takes on this section - just work fast, but don't guess or work so fast that you get stupid.
Reading Comprehension
BORING. That being said, you cannot study very well for this - its actually a very good test of your critical "understandability" of what a certain statement means. Some were easy, some not so much. This was 30 minutes I think.
Mechanical Comprehension
Much easier than I was led to believe. I studied too much for this section and should have focused on general physics, chemistry, and the various BASIC fundamentals of fluids, dynamics, and so forth. This section was still easy, but I had to think back to high school level science. I had no electrical questions.
Aviation and Nautical Info
This part is what most likely boosted my score - I love Naval History, so I didn't study. I also know airplanes better than most of my pilots, we all have our hobbies. This section had a lot of stuff found in the FAA Aeronautical Handbook - lots of guides on this site will help you - but don't study too much, a lot of very practical and requires basic common sense. There were few history questions, but it did ask about certain models of aircraft i.e. "What airframe has tilt rotor capability?" (V-22 Osprey).... I enjoyed this part and breezed through it.
Naval Aviation Trait Facet Blah Blah...
So, I may be the only one who hated this section more than the stupid video game, but seriously. I do not enjoy having to select whether I "Skip checking out tools properly when no one is looking" or if "I spend a majority of my days thinking about my failures"... This section is supposed to get to know "you", but all it did was frustrate me. You are supposed to pick the "most correct" answer, but some are so horrible that I am literally lying just to select either statement. Dislike.
Performance Based Measures
Now for the fun part! I was really looking forward to this section. I did nearly perfect on the "UAV Targeting" section. I got excited and get one wrong. PLEASE PRACTICE! You can download the flash cards on this site and they are great! That being said, I am hoping to build a better set - the ones most people download are fine, but I have some great advice that is a surefire way to pass this section with ease. PM me if you would like my personal advice and technique. I will refrain from posting here so that I do not confuse anyone unknowingly.
The dichotic listening is super easy - don't rest your hands on the controls like they say- "hover" your fingers over the buttons to keep you from making an impulsive incorrect decision. That extra nanosecond of space could save you a few points. Try a few techniques, but what I did was look left or right according to the "target ear" to help compartmentalize the string of letters and numbers. Don't stress this part - its easy.
Once you are tested on that you have to chase a couple little airplanes on the screen. The controls vary in sensitivity and so on, so be ready. The joystick was inverted for me, meaning if I wanted to hover my crosshair over the top left corner of the screen, I had to push the stick forward and left. That may be natural for some, but I have over 100 hours of "stick" time, and it was incredibly unnatural for me. My facilitator enjoyed it, but it was a good thing my mother was not watching.
You guessed it. Next you get to listen AND target the airplanes. Still pretty easy, DO NOT get stressed out. Just fly. That is the point of training - and this test is measuring YOUR aptitude in the cockpit(flight station). Relax and focus - you will do fine if you just breath and do your best to follow the target aircrafts.
After a few more tests you will then review a checklist for various engine/prop/fire emergencies. WRITE THE STEPS DOWN! Now you will follow these steps when prompted, ALL while flying and listening. Its amazing fun.
I did have a strange thing on my test - for each subsection it allows you to practice before the "tested" portion. When I did the emergency procedures test, it prompted me to practice once, then the test would begin. When I finished the practice session my test ended and it said I passed the malfunctions and procedures subtest. Not sure what happened - unless my practice session was the actual graded section? At any rate, it was pretty easy.
So that is a down and dirty on the "new" ASTB-E. There is a section you can complete before arriving - the Bio Inventory. Just be honest and thorough on this section. They can disqualify you for lying - even after you get to flight school. So don't lie. Don't undersell yourself either.
Overall my experience was great - it was quick, painless, and I had some fun in the Sim.
I passed with a OAR=51, QAR/PFAR/FOFAR of 6/7/5 and am fairly pleased. The "recruiter" at the Seattle office says to apply immediately with these scores. Apparently there is a wave of high selection rates coming - I know last year the boards were good and three of my buddies got selected their first time up.
I am applying for Pilot only this time and am thrilled to have a 6 AQR and 7 PFAR (thats Pilot Flight Aptitude Rating if you don't know).
What I will advise regarding studying. Study ALOT - but only because the tests are so short and there is literally a million things they could cover. Basic math up to not basic math. Naval history and airport information data. All of these topics are vast and studying one single book will not prepare you - in my HONEST opinion.
While I'm being honest, I did not study ANY of the gouge on this website other than the UAV Targeting flashcards. I looked at some gouge and tossed it. I studied my own way and think I did pretty decent for not knowing exactly what was on the test. The only thing I wish I would have studied more was Algebra/Trig and Chemistry. I never took Chem and I studied more complex math thinking I would remember Trig

WRONG!
So, in hindsight, maybe I should have studied more date on this site - I would encourage you to at least look it ALL over and choose for yourself. Find someone and actually talk with them in person about the test - your recruiter can hook you up - or if you're in the fleet find someone who recently applied - there are plenty out there and very few excuses why you cannot find someone.
A huge portion of OCS/STA21/LDO/CWO etc. is to put the applicant in a position to network, apply themselves, and try their hardest to go above and beyond everything and in every way.
I know this section is for the ASTB, so I apologize to the moderators.
I would encourage anyone to go and take the ASTB sooner than later - it is a HUGE weight of your shoulders and will only open up time to focus on the other requirements. DO NOT go into the test to "try it out" with the intention of retaking it. There is a 91 day waiting period and your scores ONLY count from the most recent exam. Please just study a little and do your best. If you are mildly mechanical and have decent math abilities you will do FINE. The rest is mostly common sense (minus naval history) and I honestly think anyone can do well.
If you recently tested and scored poorly, don't get mad. Just focus on being more accurate and focused next time. Do not guess - this will definitely hurt your score. This is an adaptive test and you will do much better if you answer your completed questions correctly.
As a last note, I would encourage people to study with YouTube. Just search for ASTB-e videos or "how to" videos on each topic you are deficient at. This is a great tool and if you are a visual learner you will do better here than in the gouge.
Best of luck and feel free to PM me or post questions here.
I am finalizing my package this week and will post when I have more.
Jake