Finally sitting for my RCDD next month — anyone else feel unprepared?

by Brian Y. 7 views3 replies
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Brian Y.OP
May 27, 2026

So I've been working in low-voltage design for about 11 years now and my employer has been nudging me toward the RCDD for the past two of them. I finally registered for the exam and now that it's 30 days out, I'm kind of freaking out. I've gone through the BICSI reference manual twice but honestly some of the cable pathway and spaces content just isn't sticking the way I'd like.

I started using an RCDD practice test last week and my scores are hovering around 68-72%, which I know isn't great. The study guide I picked up covers OSP design pretty well but I feel like the grounding and bonding questions are eating me alive. How many hours did people actually put in before they felt ready? I keep reading "200 hours" thrown around but that feels insane on top of a full-time project load.

Any exam tips from people who've recently passed would be genuinely helpful. Especially curious whether the real exam leans heavier on design calculations or on code/standards recall.

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emily_w
May 27, 2026
68-72% at 30 days out is actually not terrible — I was around 65% four weeks before mine and passed with a 76. The grounding questions tripped me up too. What helped me was drawing the bonding diagrams by hand rather than just reading them. Something about the physical act made it click. Also don't underestimate the OSP section on aerial plant, it showed up more than I expected.
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Hannah K.
May 28, 2026
Congrats on finally pulling the trigger — that part alone takes some people years lol. I'd push back a little on the 200-hour figure. I logged about 140 hours over 10 weeks and passed first try. The trick for me was spaced repetition on the standards: ANSI/BICSI 002, TIA-568, and the NEC bonding articles. Practice tests are great but make sure you're actually reviewing WHY you got something wrong, not just drilling volume.
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Carlos B.
May 28, 2026
The real exam is definitely heavier on standards recall than pure math in my experience. Know your cable bend radius limits and fill percentages cold — those feel like giveaways once you have them memorized and you don't want to waste time second-guessing them when you're 90 minutes in.

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