CDT exam 8 weeks out and struggling with Divisions 3 and 9 — anyone else?

by rashid_c 164 views5 replies
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rashid_cOP
May 25, 2026

I've been prepping for the CDT for about 4 weeks now and feel reasonably okay on the MasterFormat structure and general spec writing principles, but Divisions 3 and 9 are killing me. The level of material-specific detail expected in those sections is way more granular than I anticipated.

Current study routine is about 1.5 hours on weekdays and 3 hours on weekends. My practice scores are hovering around 68–71%, and the pass rate is somewhere around 65% from what I've heard, so I'm borderline. I need to clear 75% to feel confident going in.

The referencing standards questions are also tricky — knowing which ASTM or ANSI standard applies to which product type. I've started making flashcards for the most common ones. Does anyone have a sense of the top standards that show up repeatedly? Would save me a lot of time in the last stretch.

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derek_v
May 25, 2026

68–71% with 4 weeks left is actually a reasonable position. I was scoring 65% at week 5 and passed with 73% on exam day. The last two weeks of targeted drilling make a bigger difference than the first month of broad reading.

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fatima_y
May 26, 2026

For standards, focus on ACI 301, ACI 318, ASTM C150, and ASTM E84 — those came up in different forms on my exam. Don't try to memorize every standard, just know which product category each one governs.

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derek_v
May 27, 2026

Division 9 tripped me up too. The finishes section has a lot of product overlap and you have to know the spec section numbers cold. I made a one-page cheat sheet of the 09-series numbers and drilled it for two weeks straight before my exam.

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TestTaker99
June 13, 2026

I was in the exact same spot as you about three months ago, Divisions 3 and 9 felt like a totally different exam from the rest of it. The thing that finally clicked for me wasn't grinding harder on concrete and finishes detail, it was realizing the CDT isn't really testing whether you've memorized every material spec. It's testing whether you understand how the documents fit together and where information is supposed to live. Once I stopped trying to be a concrete expert and started thinking like someone organizing the project manual, those granular questions got way more answerable.

What actually moved the needle for me was drilling the document standards stuff until it was automatic, because so many of the Div 3 and 9 questions are really format and structure questions in disguise. I used this cdt cdt document standards formats practice test over and over the last two weeks and it forced me to slow down and read what each question was actually asking instead of panicking about the material. You've got 8 weeks, that's plenty. Don't overthink the technical depth, you probably know more than you think you do.

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Mike_T
June 14, 2026

I'll be honest, I almost quit around week 5. Divisions 3 and 9 felt exactly like what you're describing, just this wall of material specifics that I couldn't keep straight, and I genuinely thought the test wasn't built for someone like me who came up more on the field side than the spec side. I kept telling myself the whole thing was a waste. But I stuck with it, mostly out of stubbornness. What finally clicked for me was switching from trying to memorize every property to actually understanding why a spec calls for what it calls for. Concrete and finishes both started making sense once I stopped treating them as trivia and started asking what problem each requirement was solving.

So no, you're not crazy, and you're not behind. Eight weeks is plenty if you stop grinding flashcards and start doing practice questions wrong, on purpose, and reading why you missed them. That's the part that moved my scores. I went in convinced I'd fail Division 9 and it ended up being one of my stronger sections. Keep going. The granular stuff feels impossible right up until it doesn't.

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