Discuss 18th Edition / BS7671 Amendment 2 Exam tips in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

It'll depend on a couple of things. If you're on the tools then you'll have picked up a lot of the more common regs and won't necessarily have to find them in the book. For the mocks I've been looking the ones I've known up anyway just to help familiarize myself with the book's layout.

You mentioned that you were taking too long. Have you timed yourself doing a full exam to see how long it's taking per question on average? Some questions might take me 3 to 4 minutes, but I average at about 1 minute per question over a whole exam.

Remember that the pass mark is about 60% ~ 36 questions out of 60. If you're using an online course, go back and look at the introduction to the exam.
 
I recently sat my 18th edition with amendment 2, I left it as long as possible but NAPIT would have kicked us out if one of didn't do the 18th this time round. It was every bit as loony as I thought it would be, 90% of the questions bore no relationship with the work that I do day to day, why on earth do I need to know how long a factory gangplank can be in order to fit a few sockets in a kitchen extension, or even if I was on a gangplank why would I car how long it was. There was questions about marinas and all sorts.

I know its to see if you can find the answers to stuff in a book but it might as well have been questions on knitting as electrics it was that irrelevant. I wouldn't mind but on the rare occasion that I need to find something out on the job I just google it, I wouldn't dream of wasting 20 minutes thumbing through a 500 page book to find something, that's so 19th century.
 
I recently sat my 18th edition with amendment 2, I left it as long as possible but NAPIT would have kicked us out if one of didn't do the 18th this time round. It was every bit as loony as I thought it would be, 90% of the questions bore no relationship with the work that I do day to day, why on earth do I need to know how long a factory gangplank can be in order to fit a few sockets in a kitchen extension, or even if I was on a gangplank why would I car how long it was. There was questions about marinas and all sorts.

I know its to see if you can find the answers to stuff in a book but it might as well have been questions on knitting as electrics it was that irrelevant. I wouldn't mind but on the rare occasion that I need to find something out on the job I just google it, I wouldn't dream of wasting 20 minutes thumbing through a 500 page book to find something, that's so 19th century.

You surely can't expect them to write an exam tailored just to what you do in your job??
 
You surely can't expect them to write an exam tailored just to what you do in your job??
No my problem is with NAPIT, they exist just soley for domestic work yet to be in their club you need the 18th edition but the exam was 90% nothing to do with domestic work so I thought it was a completely useless waste of time.

But I stand by saying that even so, most of the questions were pointless no matter what type of electrical work you do, the 18th has so much nonsense in it nowadays it seems they are just seeing how ridiculous they can be before someone finally calls them out on it.
 
Memorise these numbers:

1, 5, 7, 13, 28, 42, 46, 53.

Each number above is the first question of the next section of the Regs.

So, for instance, questions 1-4 will be on Part 1.

When you get to question 5, you will be on Part 2.

Question 7 (to 12), the answers will be in Part 3.

... and so on.

The City and Guilds specification for the 2382 Award (the 18th Edition exam) is at:
(go to "Level 3" then "Centre Documents", the current one is the PDF titled "2382-22 L3 Award in Requirements for Electrical Installations 2022 handbook v1-0").

This document gives the specification for the number of questions on each section. Note that it does NOT state that the questions are asked in order of Parts. I took my 18th Edition exam within a week of the 18th Edition coming out, and within a day or so of the new City & Guilds exam going live. The questions were in a random order, and stayed that way for a few months... then they started putting them in order again. As far as I know (though I've been "out of the loop" as far as City & Guilds is concerned for a couple of years), they still ask the questions in order.

Note that you might have to go back and forward within a Part, it's not like you're guaranteed to aways be moving forward through the book.

The only caveat to the above, is if in the main bit of the Regs, there is to a reference to a specific Appendix, then the answer could be in there instead. For instance, question 10 (say), which you'd expext to be from Part 3, might ask a question about external influence code BA2 (or whatever), and you'll find the answer in Appendix 5, because this Appendix is referred to from Chapter 32.

The other useful tip I can give is that at the start of each Part - and, for Parts 4 and 5, at the start of each Chapter - there is a pretty comprehensive Table of Contents. So if you know (from the question number) that the answer is somewhere in Part 5, then the contents page at the start of Part 5 should help you narrow it down to a Chapter... you could then flick to that Chapter, and hopefully you'll be able to spot something that relates to the question being asked.
Thank you very much for this. I will try to memorise those numbers you mentioned above.
It'll depend on a couple of things. If you're on the tools then you'll have picked up a lot of the more common regs and won't necessarily have to find them in the book. For the mocks I've been looking the ones I've known up anyway just to help familiarize myself with the book's layout.

You mentioned that you were taking too long. Have you timed yourself doing a full exam to see how long it's taking per question on average? Some questions might take me 3 to 4 minutes, but I average at about 1 minute per question over a whole exam.

Remember that the pass mark is about 60% ~ 36 questions out of 60. If you're using an online course, go back and look at the introduction to the exam.
No I haven't timed myself but I will do so to see how long it takes me to complete the exam. Thanks for the tips and advice.
 
Online simulator sparky facts is good.
I did my 18th amd 2 a few months ago and it was three day course and did the exam the evening of the last day.
All the others came back a few days later.
Glad I did mine same day as finishing course as less time to worry unnecessarily.
The exam was all in book order.
Best tip I was given was don't get fixation on one question.
Tag the difficult ones and go back.
In the end I had plenty of time to get all questions done.
 
Best tip I was given was don't get fixation on one question.
Tag the difficult ones and go back.
That is good advice for all exams that have a set of questions (as opposed, say, to an essay).

Already mentioned by @timhoward good advice is to read through the whole paper first to get an idea of what is there. Don't panic, and read the question carefully. Don't assume what they are asking because of what you expect - read it and think.
 
@timhoward, @fivevoltlogic, @JBW175, @happysteve, @Fazz711

Thank you very much guys for your tips and advice. I sat my exam a week ago and I passed, thanks to you guys.

I will just list below which tips I really found to be the most useful for me personally;
  • Memorising the question numbers; 1, 5, 7, 13, 28, 42, 46 & 53. This helped me track which section I should be focusing on - thanks to @happysteve
  • Going through the exam 3 times. I saved time and was able to collect as many marks as possible to pass. This is handy if you are someone who is slow and will end up spending the full 2 hours on the exam - thanks to @timhoward
  • The questions being in order of section. So questions on part 1, followed by part 2, etc - thanks to @fivevoltlogic
  • Tabbing up the book with index tabs was very helpful in navigating to the relevant part quickly, etc - thanks to @JBW175
In my opinion, I found that the above mentioned tips will only work for someone who has been reading the book frequently / has done adequate revision and has a good idea of what is contained within each part. There is no short cut to passing this exam really unless you pay someone to sit it for you. (P.S. Your not doing yourself or anyone a favour if you decide to take this route).

I hope this helps.

Good luck to anyone sitting the exam!
 
@timhoward, @fivevoltlogic, @JBW175, @happysteve, @Fazz711

Thank you very much guys for your tips and advice. I sat my exam a week ago and I passed, thanks to you guys.

I will just list below which tips I really found to be the most useful for me personally;
  • Memorising the question numbers; 1, 5, 7, 13, 28, 42, 46 & 53. This helped me track which section I should be focusing on - thanks to @happysteve
  • Going through the exam 3 times. I saved time and was able to collect as many marks as possible to pass. This is handy if you are someone who is slow and will end up spending the full 2 hours on the exam - thanks to @timhoward
  • The questions being in order of section. So questions on part 1, followed by part 2, etc - thanks to @fivevoltlogic
  • Tabbing up the book with index tabs was very helpful in navigating to the relevant part quickly, etc - thanks to @JBW175
In my opinion, I found that the above mentioned tips will only work for someone who has been reading the book frequently / has done adequate revision and has a good idea of what is contained within each part. There is no short cut to passing this exam really unless you pay someone to sit it for you. (P.S. Your not doing yourself or anyone a favour if you decide to take this route).

I hope this helps.

Good luck to anyone sitting the exam!

Nice one, well done!
 

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