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FE Exam Guide for Engineering Students

The document outlines the specifications for the Fundamentals of Engineering (FE) Examination, including details about the exam structure, topics covered, and approximate percentages of test content for each topic in the morning session. The morning session includes 120 multiple-choice questions across 12 topic areas, including mathematics, engineering probability and statistics, chemistry, and more. The afternoon session focuses on one of seven discipline-specific modules selected by the examinee.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
88 views3 pages

FE Exam Guide for Engineering Students

The document outlines the specifications for the Fundamentals of Engineering (FE) Examination, including details about the exam structure, topics covered, and approximate percentages of test content for each topic in the morning session. The morning session includes 120 multiple-choice questions across 12 topic areas, including mathematics, engineering probability and statistics, chemistry, and more. The afternoon session focuses on one of seven discipline-specific modules selected by the examinee.

Uploaded by

Pranav
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

EXAM SPECIFICATIONS

Fundamentals of Engineering (FE) Examination


Effective October 2005
• The FE examination is an 8-hour supplied-reference examination: 120 questions in the 4-hour morning
session and 60 questions in the 4-hour afternoon session.
• The afternoon session is administered in the following seven modules—Chemical, Civil, Electrical,
Environmental, Industrial, Mechanical, and Other/General engineering.
• Examinees work all questions in the morning session and all questions in the afternoon module they
have chosen.

MORNING SESSION (120 questions in 12 topic areas)


Approximate
Percentage of Test
Topic Area Content

I. Mathematics 15%
A. Analytic geometry
B. Integral calculus
C. Matrix operations
D. Roots of equations
E. Vector analysis
F. Differential equations
G. Differential calculus

II. Engineering Probability and Statistics 7%


A. Measures of central tendencies and dispersions (e.g., mean, mode, standard deviation)
B. Probability distributions (e.g., discrete, continuous, normal, binomial)
C. Conditional probabilities
D. Estimation (e.g., point, confidence intervals) for a single mean
E. Regression and curve fitting
F. Expected value (weighted average) in decision-making
G. Hypothesis testing

III. Chemistry 9%
A. Nomenclature
B. Oxidation and reduction
C. Periodic table
D. States of matter
E. Acids and bases
F. Equations (e.g., stoichiometry)
G. Equilibrium
H. Metals and nonmetals

IV. Computers 7%
A. Terminology (e.g., memory types, CPU, baud rates, Internet)
B. Spreadsheets (e.g., addresses, interpretation, “what if,” copying formulas)
C. Structured programming (e.g., assignment statements, loops and branches, function calls)

V. Ethics and Business Practices 7%


A. Code of ethics (professional and technical societies)
B. Agreements and contracts
C. Ethical versus legal
D. Professional liability
E. Public protection issues (e.g., licensing boards)
EXAM SPECIFICATIONS—MORNING 1
VI. Engineering Economics 8%
A. Discounted cash flow (e.g., equivalence, PW, equivalent annual FW, rate of return)
B. Cost (e.g., incremental, average, sunk, estimating)
C. Analyses (e.g., breakeven, benefit-cost)
D. Uncertainty (e.g., expected value and risk)

VII. Engineering Mechanics (Statics and Dynamics) 10%


A. Resultants of force systems
B. Centroid of area
C. Concurrent force systems
D. Equilibrium of rigid bodies
E. Frames and trusses
F. Area moments of inertia
G. Linear motion (e.g., force, mass, acceleration, momentum)
H. Angular motion (e.g., torque, inertia, acceleration, momentum)
I. Friction
J. Mass moments of inertia
K. Impulse and momentum applied to:
1. particles
2. rigid bodies
L. Work, energy, and power as applied to:
1. particles
2. rigid bodies

VIII. Strength of Materials 7%


A. Shear and moment diagrams
B. Stress types (e.g., normal, shear, bending, torsion)
C. Stress strain caused by:
1. axial loads
2. bending loads
3. torsion
4. shear
D. Deformations (e.g., axial, bending, torsion)
E. Combined stresses
F. Columns
G. Indeterminant analysis
H. Plastic versus elastic deformation

IX. Material Properties 7%


A. Properties
1. chemical
2. electrical
3. mechanical
4. physical
B. Corrosion mechanisms and control
C. Materials
1. engineered materials
2. ferrous metals
3. nonferrous metals

X. Fluid Mechanics 7%
A. Flow measurement
B. Fluid properties
C. Fluid statics
D. Energy, impulse, and momentum equations
E. Pipe and other internal flow

2 EXAM SPECIFICATIONS—MORNING
XI. Electricity and Magnetism 9%
A. Charge, energy, current, voltage, power
B. Work done in moving a charge in an electric field (relationship between
voltage and work)
C. Force between charges
D. Current and voltage laws (Kirchhoff, Ohm)
E. Equivalent circuits (series, parallel)
F. Capacitance and inductance
G. Reactance and impedance, susceptance and admittance
H. AC circuits
I. Basic complex algebra

XII. Thermodynamics 7%
A. Thermodynamic laws (e.g., 1st Law, 2nd Law)
B. Energy, heat, and work
C. Availability and reversibility
D. Cycles
E. Ideal gases
F. Mixture of gases
G. Phase changes
H. Heat transfer
I. Properties of:
1. enthalpy
2. entropy

EXAM SPECIFICATIONS—MORNING 3

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