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BG
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The navigation portion is multiple choice but not mulitiple guess with four
very close answers of which you will get the correct one providing you did the chart work and formula work properly. But if you get one incorrect it will lead you down a garden path of all wrong answers for the rest of the question string. You get the first one wrong, the others will be wrong (may be done right but based on incorrect information from your mistake on number one....) So it really isn't multiple choice. It's one correct and three incorrect choices. The Rules of the Road test likewise has one correct and three very close but incorrect answers. Requires 90% minimum to pass. Again not mulitple choice but one correct choice only, one....only. This holds true in the other portions as well. One correct choice and three wrong choices. The schools like the USCG allow you to retake the test but it's a different test with different questions and different chart. The only break I saw was not having to repay another $140. The advantage to the school came when they know a USCG test question has a bad correct answer, usually because of a rule change without a corresponding question change. Without giving it away they carefully taught that section so you could choose the 'best' correct answer. The one area where Neal is incorrect is in the 25 GT limit. At least in the past this limitation was bumped up rather automatically about 25 tons per six months of experience. That practice may have changed though. With the exception of the navigation section the test we took for AB Unlimited was the exact same test as the one I previously took for 100 ton including the ColRegs section. Right down to the final dotted 'i'. Nav tests aren't given to AB applicants. "Recobee" wrote in message ... Joe, USMM Master bates about the Coast Guard test: Multiple choice? Wrong.. It is not all multiple choice. Who told you that? It is odvious you know nothing about USCG testing. What, was there an essay question? About nobody checking the forms people fill out he again bates: Wrong again. You may fill out your sea time form and attest to your "days at sea" by simply stating that you have done so on your own vessel. If you don't own a boat, or have really never been to sea, you might have a friend who does own a boat sign the form for you. You might fill out the form stating that you have been out sailing in international waters rather than sitting at your mooring in the mangroves, and thus becoming eligible for a "Near Coastal" instead of an "Inland Waters" ticket. The USCG just takes your word for it. They don't have the time to check it out, and they have better things to do. In fact I believe Neal made just that suggestion a few years back in one of his boastings. As far as everyboady passing the test, he bates some mo What an idiot, close to 12% fail the test. The first time perhaps, but just look at the advertisements of the various schools, all of them guarantee you will pass. Today you don't even have to go to an exam center, the schools administer the test themselves, and they make certain that everyone that has paid their fees will eventually pass. How many times did you take it? And finally, where you can get sea time from, he cums out with: Riding on a fairy dont count, even if it is your 25+gt boyfriend Riding on any vessel counts, even a passenger ship or a ferry, if you can get the captain to sign your papers. Its all time at sea. I think the point that was being made is that holding a ticket, particularly a 25 ton ticket is absolutely meaningless, and nothing worth bragging about. It shows only the ability to memorize, not that you ever had, or ever will have, any sailing ability. |
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