***Official Dec 2014 SAT (US ONLY)***

<p>I got 48 for the miles per hour question</p>

<p>What do you think the curves will be? I think I just got 1 wrong for math due to a silly mistake. I hope its still an 800!</p>

<p>@APmaster007 it was probably 48… </p>

<p>Was there a question that had “return to present” in one of the choices? I dont remember the question…</p>

<p>Did anyone have an experimental Math??
There was a weird question with one big question with four small questions…?</p>

<p>Yes the answer for avg speed was 48. there is a formula
Avg Speed = (2 x S1 x S2) / (S1+S2)</p>

<p>@MaxNibs‌ that definitely won’t be an 800, the math section was too easy for that </p>

<p>What was the critical reading experimental. I’m pretty sure I had 4 sections of cr. Was it the one about the kid with the headphones and the old lady? </p>

<p>I had experimental math- I hated it. It had a scatterplot with 4 questions about it…did you have that? </p>

<p>Hi! A tad off topic for here, but… I took the PSAT back in October. Can someone please estimate my score if…</p>

<p>CR Part 1: Skipped 8. :persevere: Maybe 3-4 wrong.
Math Part 1: Skipped 2 1-2 Wrong
CR Part 2: Skipped 3 3-4 wrong?
Math Part 2: All correct maybe 1-2 wrong on fill-in the rest were all right.
Writing: 2-3 wrong</p>

<p>about the question which had “return to present”, i chose the one that said something like another event on that day</p>

<p>@firered777 yes, denied OF was incorrect</p>

<p>How did you get 192? I got 128</p>

<p>If we knew that a certain section is experimental and barely answered them, would it affect anything somehow or just be trashed and used for statistics?</p>

<p>what was the answer to the arc question</p>

<p>And a lot of people are asking the same question over and over again a doc would be a lot more organized.</p>

<p>Guys did you have an article about a gun who worked in Boston, listened to music and at the end he was talking to a black old lady? </p>

<p>192</p>

<p>Sorry guy not gun </p>

<p>@top586‌ I did something like the 3/4 of the whole circumference</p>