<p>@doctator Thank goodness I took the SAT 1 in Dec instead of this then!
and yeah I always skip like 10+ (mainly cuz i run out of time)
I’m really scared because even a 790 puts me in the 90 percentile so I need a 800.</p>
<p>Everyone wants an 800…hopefully we will get it lol…just got 800 on barrons test 5 hopefully I dont lose all my knowledge and get stupid by 8 am tmrw lol</p>
<p>★☆★good luck everyone!!!★☆★</p>
<p>800 on test 5?!! Dang…im debating on taking dr chung test 8 or barron test 5, as i only have time for one more since im on est</p>
<p>770 on PR. Ugghhh. I’m really nervous. I want to get a 800 badly</p>
<p>We should all relax by now. DO NOT DO ANY MORE TEST and relax.
Have a good night sleep and good luck tomorrow! :D</p>
<p>took the official math 2 CB guide test and scored 800. It bolstered my moral tho ;)</p>
<p>I didn’t have time to do 3 (48,49, and the int range percent one) but I guessed c on 48 and the percent one</p>
<p>percent is 50</p>
<p>what did u get for cos^2(π/a)… =1.718</p>
<p>also the graphs of f(x) and g(x) with a</p>
<p>that question was supposed to be around 1.282; cos^2 + sin^2 = 1 and there were 3 sin’s and 3 cos’s, so if you add the two equations you get 3 = 1.718 + x</p>
<p>for the graph of f(x) and g(x) i got E</p>
<p>Are you sure you want to defy Collegeboard’s rules and discuss the questions? Or am I mistaken and it’s allowed?
Anyway, I omitted 3 because I ran out of time and guessed on 1. Just happy to be done! </p>
<p>I omitted 3 as well, but I didn’t guess on any. I omitted the last 2 and 24. Is it still possible to get a 800?</p>
<p>What was the answer choice to 48 the cos^2 question? And what was the answer choice to the int range percentage ? Cuz I guessed c so I don’t know the answer choices </p>
<p>For 48, I know that I got it. it was like 1.28. </p>
<p>hb the question that asked about three prime numbers being the same and one being different, was that 8</p>
<p>Interquartile one was 33% and e for the f x and g x cause fx wasn’t increasing more than fx was initially </p>
<p>no iqr is always 50% </p>
<p>No it wasn’t. How did you get 8?</p>
<p>try the factors of 24 with the prime numbers,
24,1,2,3,4,8,6,12 all can be divisors</p>