Howdy!
My test results were 66 9/9/8
This thread helped me out immensely in preparing for the astb-e, so my first suggestion to anyone reading this is to go through every page of this thread to find study resources and anything else you should study.
I prepared for the exam using Peterson's 8th Edition, the TBAS UAV flashcards on proprofs.com, study guides from my recruiter/this thread/google, this thread, and google/khan academy. I studied for 2-3 hours a day for about 2 weeks up until a couple days before the exam when I discovered this thread then I crammed a little more.
My experience of the test will be pretty short because most of the information needed can be found in previous posts.
Math
This part of the exam was what I focused on most, especially after discovering this thread. Most sample exams and study guides floating around will not prepare you for this part of the exam. My exam consisted of various solve the equation/solve for x type problems, so know order of operations and factoring. My test had logs so make sure you know how eliminate them from an equation and the rules for simplifying logs in equations. Fractional exponents were on my test as well and came with huge numbers for hand calculations, so practice hand calculations with large numbers, so you can go quickly come test time. Weighted average problem was on it also. My test had some probability but not too much. It had the question about the 3 darts and the calendar, but I still have no clue how to solve it, so I just guessed. I did not have the matrix multiplication or the binary question, but that doesn't mean it won't be on your test. I tried to work through the problems as fast as possible without losing accuracy. The longest I spent on one problem was about 5 mins. The test cut me off with 15 minutes to spare.
Reading
Felt like I didn't do real well on this part because the exam seemed to go back and forth between difficult and easy paragraphs. My only suggestion is practice dry reading comprehension, by reading dull things then maybe summarizing it? Though my only preparation was using Peterson's 8th edition. This section ended with about 10 minutes to spare.
Mechanics
My experience with this wasn't much different from the posts before mine. The only preparation I used for this was Peterson's 8th edition. One thing to keep in mind is that it is only 15 minutes long so remember to pickup/maintain pace. This section ended for me with about 5 minutes to spare.
ANIT
I think I was positive about 60 percent of the questions on this section and the other 40 percent I had to guess on. I wouldn't worry too much about because I still got a pretty good score and the things I didn't know, the only reason I didn't know them was because it wasn't in this thread or in my study materials. One I remember not knowing was "What is the concrete barrier that pops up behind at aircraft taking off from a carrier?"
UAV
I missed 3 on this one because I got in hurry, so try not to go so fast that is makes you mess up. I prepared for this using the flashcards on this website
http://www.proprofs.com/flashcards/story.php?title=_36014. The best method I found for this was to draw a compass on a piece of paper, take the direction of your heading, then with that direction turn that direction on the compass to the point where north would be, then whichever direction parking lot is asked for it's in the same position as the direction on your drawn compass. My average time on these was about 3 seconds.
Joystick and throttle stuff
First you do the listening stuff. Just lean on the ear you're trying to listen to. Also make sure you are aware when the headphone changes ears.
Next is just using the throttle to follow an airplane silhouette up and down in a bar. Pretty simple just stay calm and get used to how sensitive the throttle is.
Next is using the joystick to chase an airplane silhouette around a 2 dimensional space. Kind of tough but again stay calm and use it as an opportunity to figure out how to use it.
Next is throttle and joystick at the same time. Again stay calm. I focused on the 2d mainly and looked at the throttle bar with my peripherals.
Next is throttle, joystick, and listening. Stay calm, stay focused. Make sure you're hitting all the numbers and at least staying semi close to the silhouettes.
Finally you get to do emergency procedures and follow both silhouettes. Focus mainly on the emergency procedures because it states in the directions that max amount of points that can be earned only goes down after an emergency occurs or something along those lines. I had difficulty doing all three of the tasks at once. I think I almost stopped following the silhouettes while I was solving the emergencies.
I really am not entirely sure how to prepare for this, but I prepared for it using these multitasking games.
http://multitaskgames.com/ I thought they helped me at least a little, but even if they didn't they're good to play during a study break or in your free time if you've got it.
Last obvious tips. Stay hydrated and get plenty of sleep not just the night before, but the night before that as well.
Next step for me is MEPS. Hope to get an OCS class by the end of the year.
Hope this helps any wannabes out there.
Dave,
TAMU class 2015