^I put something like that. I just remember having the sulfur down as S8, so I’m assuming my answer was 8 (although I don’t remember the problem at all). I know that my balanced equation was correct, however.
Wait, wasn’t it about liters of SO2 gas or something? I dunno. I remember calculating that if I had used just “S”, there wouldn’t have been an answer on the sheet that was correct.
isnt the tetrahedral CCL4?
how do you guys think about the test overall? easy or hard? and how would the curve be based on your predictions.
@idealni1 yeah it was tetrahedral. I thought it was easier than the May test but it still had some weird/ambiguous questions. I would predict the curve to be average, probably no more than -3 or -4 raw for an 800
@kgsoccer08 What was the curve like for the May test?
@YoohooAddict I’m actually not sure. I don’t think they give out that information. But I know on the May test I was very unprepared, I missed about 5 or 6, and I got a 770 so I’m thinking there was a curve of maybe -3 raw for an 800
Oh so online they just give you your score, but they don’t tell you the conversions or what you got wrong?
@YoohooAddict no not for the subject tests. They just give you the score and the percentile
For the redox balancing one, I remember having to put coefficients of 2 and 3 to the half rxns to balance electrons.
I’m pretty sure 5 wrong is at the very least a 780–it’s either a 780 or a 790 on the College Board practice test, which was 5000 times easier than this one.
it was like H2S + NaCl ->
I tried doing precipitation but it doesn’t balance…
@marie122 That’s just double replacement, though. Products are Na2S and HCl. Coefficients are 1, 2, 1, 2
@ssapbio precipitation and double replacement are the same thing. you forgot to put the 2 in front of HCl and then it wouldn’t balance…
ohhh I didn’t get it at that time…
@ssapbio do you remember which compound it asked for the coefficients on the test?
Hey guys, what do you think a score with 7 wrong and 4 omitted would be around?
750? I’m just estimating and I’m not looking at the book, but I believe your raw score would be a 71; a 79 in the book is a 780, and a 700 is a 61.
@kgsoccer08 I think it was one of the compounds that had a coefficient of one. Not positive, though.