I seem to remember there only being 7 or 8 short written questions, with only about 3 or 4 lines to write your answers.
One of the questions was about initial verification of an addition to an existing installation.
I wrote that I would de-energise and inform the client immediately about the broken socket.
Over the next page was another similar question about conducting a periodic.
I went back and crossed out my answer on the first question to write ‘replace the broken socket.’
In another question, I quoted a Reg. No. for overload protectionExaminer asked me about earth fault protection, so I took the paper back so I could find and write the earth fault Reg. No.
7 photos 1 with zero faults, 1 with 3 faults (I found 5), the other 5 with 1 or 2 faults.
There were 4 of us doing the Practical on 2 test rigs.
Me and another chap went first, we were given an EIC and EICR form each.
Supply Characteristics, installation address and circuit names were already filled out.
We did 2 circuits for initial verification then transferred the results from those circuits to the EICR and after the examiner/tutor switched in the 2 faults, we did the periodic.
After all the dead tests were done, they energised the boards and we did Ze, PFC and RCD tests.
We had to calculate Zs for all the circuits, which I forgot to do, so the examiner/tutor just gave me back the paper work so I could complete it.
While we were doing the paper work, another 2 guys came in to start on the boards.
There was a slight kerfuffle, when it turned out the examiner/tutor hadn’t switched off our faults.
The 2 hour 60 questions multiple choice exam, is the one that most fail.
Apparently the exam centre had once failed someone on the short written questions.
I believe the pass mark is 75%.
If you do the exam before 1st July, you will not get any questions about any of the changes in the 18th.