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Thursday, February 24, 2011

Electric Shock and Electrical Burns

The 12.5% of the test on Codes and Standards includes the NEC, National Electrical Safety Code (NESC) and Electric shocks and burns. I already went over the NEC so today it was on to shocks and burns.


Electrical shocks and burns is really the domain of NFPA 70e: Standard for Electrical Safety in the Workplace, and if you want to learn how to do Incident Energy and Flash Protection Boundary Calculations, Annex D of NFPA70E is a good resource, but if you don't feel like reading through all that and just want to familiarize yourself with the subject, Mike Holt has a short article on Electric Shock and a longer one on Electrical Burns.

I'm not really sure what kind of questions the NCEES will ask on Electric shock and burns. I could envision a question on calculating arc flash protection boundary distance question or a maximum safe shock duration.
  • Calculating Arc Flash Protection boundary distances is straight out of Annex D of NFPA 70e
  • To determine the maximum safe shock duration according to IEEE Std. 80, you can use the formula, T=0.116÷(E÷R), where T is duration in seconds, E is the electromotive force in volts, and R is resistance of the person, which is a constant 1,000 ohms.
Ugly's has a handbook for Electrical Safety and NFPA 70e which has some calculations in it that mirror Annex D. Google books has a preview of it which gives you a free 20 or so pages.

NEC digest also has a good article on PPE person protective equipment and burns

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

NEC Code Review

Yesterday I attended an all day seminar on the 2011 NEC code which was a good review of how much of the code I don't normally use and need to freshen up on. The PPI book is only a brief survey of what topics the code covers and doesn't actually prepare you to answer code related questions so I went in search of something that would force me to go through a bunch of NEC problems. Tada, Mike Holt the NEC code guru comes to the rescue. He has free online quizzes for the 2002, 2005 and 2008 NEC. It randomly quizzes you on 10 NEC code questions and then gives you the section with the right answer if you mess up. It has 1900 different questions and it reloads different questions each time you open the quiz. If you want the full quiz all at once with all 1900 questions you can buy it for $25. Mike, you rock as always.

Mike Holt Free 2008 code quiz

Other free Mike Holt goodies:

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Measurement and Instrumentation

The NCEES exam specification puts Measurement and Instrumentation at 7.5% of the Electrical Power PE test, but finding review materials on testing and measurements is tough. The measurement & instrumentation section includes:

1. Instrument transformers (pg 3-7)
2. Wattmeters
3. VOM metering
4. Insulation testing (pg 14-1)
5. Ground resistance testing (pg 14-5)

I couldn't find any good resources beyond the PPI book for VOM metering, but I found some good free Army Technical Manuals on the other subjects, which I have linked to above. You have to love free government info.

Monday, February 14, 2011

Lighting Design

The Electrical Power PE test has 10% allocated for Special Applications including Illumination. I have a IESNA (Illuminating Engineering Society of North America) handbook and read through the Chapter 10: IESNA Lighting Design Geide and the PPI chapter on Illumination.

If you don't have access to these resources and want to have the basic Illumination topics covered I found 99% of this information available on the web. Once you know what terms to look up, most of them are on Wikipedia, but here are some additional sources that I found useful:

IESNA makes its 100 significant papers available for free online, which has tons of good information. Two of them in particular cover subjects from the manual fairly well:

Paranoid

Want a way to make yourself paranoid about your study efforts? Read engineering forums where helpful people tell you what books they used and how they studied. After reading lists as long as my arm, all with different books and people touting minimum 400 hr study requirements I'm thoroughly paranoid about passing. Perhaps this will result in renewed motivation or paranoid buying of expensive reference materials that I'll never have time to get through?

Go here if you need to up your motivation/paranoia: Engineerboards.com

One useful thing that I gleaned after reading through a few threads is that there are way more NEC type questions on recent tests than the PPI book would lead you to believe, given their coverage of the subject. Yay for something I use everyday in my job being on the test.

Oh and the Grainger/Stevenson book is universally beloved. Thank goodness I found an old copy of that one. I got through 3 chapters out this weekend and found it to be well written. I still need to find a source of more practice problems though. One can only do so much reading.

Friday, February 11, 2011

Choosing a Calculator for Electrical PE

In an attempt to count my time as preparing for the PE instead of procrastinating my reading assignment for the day, I decided it was time to get a new calculator.


NCEES  calculator policy as of Spring 2011:
No other models of calculators will be allowed.  Only the models listed below may be used on the examination.
  • Casio:   All fx-115 models. Any Casio calculator must contain fx-115 in its model name.  (Casio FX-115ES) ($19)
  • Hewlett Packard: The HP 33S ($53), HP 35s ($49) but no others. 
  • Texas Instruments:  All TI-30X ($12) and TI36X ($20) models. Any Texas Instruments calculator must contain either T1-30X or T1-36X in its model name.

It's important to practice with the calculator you will use on the actual test. I have been using the TI-30XIIS, which I have two of from someone else who took the PE. I quickly realized that the Civil PE and Electrical PE have one major difference when it comes to selecting a calculator. I need to easily be able to manipulate complex numbers and the TI wasn't cutting it. After a month of struggling with it and working around it, cursing at its lack of TI-89 skills, I gave up. This left me with the HP and Casio to choose from. The HP-33 is great if you need RPN, but it costs the most and didn't have great reviews, so I ended up buying two Casio FX-115ES from Walmart and calling it a day. I am so glad I switched. The three phase power problems are WAY easier. (beware, apparently this calculator is banned in some states its so awesome)

One thing that I really like about the 115ES is that you can input the values in rectangular and polar format in the same entry and it doesn't choke. Awesome! One less step for me, thank you.

Apparently you can get the HP-33 programmed to do all sorts of useful things for like $200, but I'd rather actually learn the material and the Casio does everything I need, thanks. I'll go back to using my TI-89 after this test.

Oh dear, I just spent 20 minutes monologuing about calculators. Back to power system analysis review.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Electrical PE Exam Reference Books

Last night I took a break from studying to look up the recommended reference materials from the study book. They are all from like 1980s. You would think they could find modern equivelents, the books that we all use in school now, not seminal textbooks from the 80s that cost hundreds of bucks to track down!

I know I'm probably being picky, but honestly the list is useless. Bring the NEC, NESC, IESNA handbook and your books from school, but I don't think I would track down a single thing on this list. Any suggestions for other references, you know modern ones?

This was one of the rare ones that's been regularly updated since the 80s:




This one is from 1980:

An Introduction to Digital and Analog Integrated Circuits and Applications

Also from 1980:

Applied Electromagnetics

Oh I found one, and its $215...at least its modern






Back to 1981:

Electrical Power Technology (Electronic Technology Series)

At least you can pick this 1981 classic up for less than 2 bucks:

Linear Circuits

Woohoo, a modern update:



Back to the old stuff...



Earley and Sheehan haven't updated their National Electrical Code Handbook since the 2005 code cycle, might want to spec the new authors:



I thought this title was out of print, then I realized the PPI author spelled the author's name Marne wrong (Marie). At least the book is up to date.



Seriously, you want me to look at NEC code examples from 1999?



Ok, its from 1994, but someone else who recently passed the PE recommended it too:



The fact that this came out in 1999 and I think that's recent is reflective of the rest of this list.



2006! Woot, this list is going to end on a good note.



Yeah, I wouldn't take a much older book on Biomedical engineering seriously. Good call using a somewhat modern reference.



In fairness to the author, the new IESNA handbook only came out a month or so ago so I won't fault him for spec'ing the ten year old one.



A decent looking book, but unneeded for the Power test probably, might want to edit the list for each test now that you're selling 3 different prep books.