You must pass both to earn CompTIA A+. Order doesn’t matter.
Do PBQs appear on Core 1?
Yes. In addition to multiple-choice items, Core 1 usually includes performance-based questions (PBQs)—drag-and-drop wiring, port matching, printer flows, or simple triage tasks. If a PBQ is slow, skip and return. Don’t let one item burn your clock.
How many questions and how long is the exam?
CompTIA can vary item count and timing by form. Budget time for check-in and keep a 5–10 minute buffer to review flagged items.
Which hardware topics should I master first?
Core components: motherboard form factors, CPU sockets, RAM types (DDR generations), PSU wattage/rails, cooling/airflow.
Storage: HDD vs SSD, SATA vs NVMe (M.2 PCIe), form factor vs interface vs protocol.
Peripherals: USB generations and connectors (A/C), display standards (HDMI/DP/DVI/VGA), Thunderbolt 3/4.
BIOS/UEFI basics: boot order, secure boot, firmware updates—when and why.
What storage and RAID knowledge is most testable?
RAID 0/1/5/10 concepts (performance vs redundancy; disk counts; one-disk fault tolerance for RAID 5).
SMART monitoring and symptoms of failing drives.
File systems: NTFS vs exFAT vs FAT32 (use cases).
Ports & protocols—what do I really need to memorize?
Know the common set cold: HTTP/HTTPS (80/443), SSH (22), FTP/FTPS/SFTP (21/990/22), SMTP/Submission (25/587), POP3/IMAP (+TLS 995/993), RDP (3389), DNS (53), DHCP (67/68), SNMP (161/162), LDAP/LDAPS (389/636). Practice with flashcards until instant.
Ethernet cabling—how deep does it go?
Standards: 100BASE-TX, 1000BASE-T, 10GBASE-T and their Cat requirements/distances.
Cables/connectors: Straight-through vs crossover (legacy), crimping pinouts (awareness), PoE basics.
Fiber:MMF vs SMF (range), LC/SC connectors, handling/cleaning best practices.
How much do I need to know about BIOS/UEFI settings?
Basics only: boot order, Secure Boot, enabling/disabling devices, XMP/DOCP memory profiles (awareness), and firmware updates when necessary for stability or compatibility (perform with caution).
What are the best ways to memorize ports/cables/Wi-Fi?
Daily micro-drills (10–15 flashcards).
Group by theme (web/mail/remote/infra).
Compare/contrast tables (Cat6 vs 6a; 802.11ac vs 802.11ax).
Teach aloud—if you can explain it clearly, you’ve learned it.
Any guidance on time management and PBQs?
First pass fast (~60–70 seconds per MC item).
Skip and flag PBQs if they’re time sinks; finish MC, then return.
Keep a 5–10 minute buffer for flagged items and PBQs at the end.
How long should I study—and how should I structure it?
From some experience: 3–4 weeks. From near-zero: 5–6 weeks with labs.
Suggested cadence:
Week 3: Printers + mobile + virtualization; first PBQ practice.
Week 4: Two full mocks; convert misses into 2-bullet rules and re-drill.
What are “2-bullet rules,” and why use them?
They’re short, sticky heuristics made from your misses:
APIPA → DHCP path before cables.
Ghosting → fuser/drum; streaks → drum/toner.
5/6 GHz for throughput; disable WPS.
Use them right before practice sets and on exam day for quick recall.
Should I memorize exact throughput numbers (Wi-Fi/Ethernet)?
Know orders of magnitude (e.g., 1 Gbps for 1000BASE-T; 10 Gbps for 10GBASE-T) and relative differences (ac vs ax, Cat6 vs 6a). Perfect PHY maxima matter less than picking the right standard/security for the scenario.
What do I do when a symptom has multiple plausible causes?
Apply the six-step method and pick the least intrusive reversible step that best tests your theory. For example, name resolution fails: check DNS settings before replacing cables.
Any final exam-day tips?
Sleep, hydrate, and arrive early.
Read the stem’s final question if the preface is long—aim your reading.
Eliminate answers that violate safety, least-privilege/least-intrusion, or basic networking logic.
Keep calm; use your 2-bullet rules and revisit flagged items with fresh eyes.
Quick readiness checklist
I can match ports ↔ protocols instantly.
I can choose the correct cable/connector (Cat6 vs 6a, LC vs SC, HDMI vs DP).
I know 802.11 generations and WPA2/WPA3 setup basics.
I can recite the laser printing process and map symptoms → components.
I can explain RAID 0/1/5/10 in one sentence each.
I can run ipconfig/ping/tracert/nslookup and interpret outputs.
I follow a six-step troubleshooting method and pick the least intrusive next step.