Just got my CAT results back and passed with an 81%. Took me two full attempts — failed the first time with a 69%, which stings but it forced me to actually understand the code sections instead of pattern-matching practice questions. If you're prepping now, I'd heavily recommend working through a CAT practice test multiple times and actually looking up every question you miss in the source material.
The NEC Article 760 content on fire alarm wiring is harder than it looks on paper. The distinctions between Class 1, 2, and 3 circuits and the NPLFA vs. PLFA classifications caused me to miss 4-5 questions on my first attempt because I was guessing based on intuition rather than knowing the rules. Second time around I made a table of all circuit classifications and their wiring requirements. That alone probably added 8 points.
The intrusion and access control sections are more straightforward if you have field experience. Panel programming logic, zone supervision, detection theory — that's stuff you either know from working installs or you learn it in a few weeks of focused study. The code sections are where people without a strong electrical background tend to fall short.
I'd estimate I put in about 60 hours of total prep for the second attempt. The exam itself is 100 questions in 2.5 hours, so there's no time pressure if you know the material — I finished in under 90 minutes.
That 60-hour estimate for a retake sounds right. Most people I know who pass on the first try put in 40-50 hours. The ones who don't take it seriously and do 15-20 hours almost always end up retaking it.
Congrats on the 81. Article 760 is exactly where I lost points on my first attempt too. The supervised vs. unsupervised circuit distinctions are tested in ways that feel like trick questions until you've memorized the actual definitions rather than just the general concept.
The access control portion has gotten harder in recent versions of the exam. Biometric integration questions, credential hierarchy, and fail-safe vs. fail-secure door configurations show up more now. Make sure your prep materials are from the last 2 years.
I passed on my first try at 77%, but I'd been doing fire alarm installs for 8 years so the field knowledge was solid. If you're coming from a non-install background, budget more time than you think for the technical application questions — reading about a circuit and wiring one are different kinds of knowledge.
Related Discussions
- CAT exam study timeline - how long did it actually take you to feel ready?4 replies
- CAT certification — how much does shop experience actually help on the exam?4 replies
- CAT exam prep – pool chemistry section is harder than I expected4 replies
- CAT certified aerobics trainer exam — worth it if you already hold an ACE Group Fitness cert?4 replies
- CAT exam - what's the breakdown between install knowledge and code compliance?4 replies