2023 Hawaii Master Electrician + Electrician Calculations Study Guides & National Electrical Code Combo (Based on the 2023 NEC)

2023 Hawaii Master Electrician + Electrician Calculations Study Guides & National Electrical Code Combo (Based on the 2023 NEC)

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2023 Hawaii Master Electrician + Electrician Calculations Study Guides & National Electrical Code Combo (Based on the 2023 NEC)

2023 Hawaii Master Electrician + Electrician Calculations Study Guides & National Electrical Code Combo (Based on the 2023 NEC)

If you’re preparing for Hawaii’s top-level electrician license and you want a study setup built around the 2023 National Electrical Code, this combo brings your core tools together in one place: a Hawaii-focused master-level study guide, a dedicated electrician calculations study guide, and the National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 paperback.

In Hawaii, the license commonly associated with “master-level” authority is the Supervising Electrician license—your credential to direct and supervise electrical work and perform electrical work under Hawaii’s licensing structure. Your exam preparation needs to reflect that responsibility. It’s not just code familiarity. It’s accurate application, confident decision-making, and calculations you can trust under a time limit.

This package is designed for working electricians who want a realistic, practice-forward approach:

  • Stronger code application: learn where requirements live and how to confirm exceptions and conditions.
  • Controlled calculations: build a repeatable setup method that prevents avoidable mistakes.
  • Master-level readiness: prepare the way supervising electricians think—safe, compliant, and consistent.

Important Hawaii exam note: Hawaii’s PSI Candidate Information Bulletin for electrician examinations states that the Supervising Electrician exam is open book and that the examination center provides the National Electrical Code, 2020 edition as reference material during the exam. This combo is based on the 2023 NEC for updated code-cycle study and long-term readiness, while you should still be prepared to test with the exam’s provided reference edition.

Who this combo is for: Electricians preparing for Hawaii’s Supervising Electrician (master-level) exam who want a structured study plan combining code study, calculation drills, and exam-style practice.

What You Get

  • 2023 Hawaii Master Electrician Study Guide
    Master-level review and practice support designed to strengthen NEC application, scenario-based reasoning, and supervising-level decision-making.
  • 2023 Electrician Calculations Study Guide
    Calculations-focused practice to improve electrical math accuracy, build consistent setups, and reduce avoidable mistakes under time pressure.
  • National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 Paperback
    Your 2023 Code reference for modern code-cycle study, navigation drills, tables, definitions, and exception-based rules.

Exam Details

Hawaii’s electrician examination program is administered under the Hawaii Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs (DCCA), Professional and Vocational Licensing Division, with examinations delivered by PSI.

For the Supervising Electrician examination (the master-level license in Hawaii’s structure), PSI’s Candidate Information Bulletin lists:

  • Number of questions: 70
  • Minimum passing score: 70%
  • Time allowed: 180 minutes

The bulletin also defines “Supervising Electrician” as a person licensed by the board as a supervising electrician to direct and supervise the performance of electrical work and to perform electrical work.

Why this matters for your study plan: you’re training to perform as the responsible qualifier on real work. That’s why your preparation should include both:

  • Code accuracy (locate the governing rule and apply it correctly), and
  • calculations confidence (size, protect, and interpret electrical values with a consistent method).

Open Book Test

PSI’s Hawaii Electrician Examinations Candidate Information Bulletin states: This examination is OPEN BOOK, and the following reference material will be provided by the examination center:

  • National Electrical Code, 2020 edition

Open-book exams reward electricians who train the right habits. You’re not trying to memorize the NEC cover to cover. You’re training to:

  • Recognize question types quickly (services/feeder/branch circuits, grounding and bonding, conductors, raceways, equipment, and special conditions).
  • Choose your “first stop” in the Code before searching, so you don’t waste time wandering.
  • Confirm exceptions and conditions that change general rules.
  • Use tables correctly by reading headings, notes, and limitations before selecting values.

Even though the exam center provides the NEC 2020 during testing, the navigation skill you build with the NEC 2023 paperback still supports better performance: stronger code structure familiarity, better instincts for where rules live, and more confidence moving through articles, parts, and tables.

Licensing Steps

Hawaii’s electrician licensing pathway is managed through DCCA PVL and the Board of Electricians and Plumbers. A practical, exam-focused path for the supervising (master-level) license typically follows this progression:

  1. Earn and maintain your Journey Worker Electrician registration and meet Hawaii’s minimum time-in-grade requirement for supervising eligibility.
  2. Gather your experience documentation consistent with the Board’s application and verification requirements.
  3. Submit your application for the Supervising Electrician examination through the PVL process.
  4. After approval, schedule your PSI exam using the instructions provided in your eligibility notice.
  5. Pass the open-book exam and complete any remaining issuance steps required by PVL/Board procedures.

This combo supports the part you control every day: becoming test-ready through structured practice—code application, calculations training, and exam-style review that builds real performance under a clock.

State Requirements

Hawaii’s minimum licensing requirements are established in Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) Chapter 448E.

For the Supervising Electrician examination (master-level in Hawaii), HRS §448E-5 states that to be eligible, an applicant must have been registered with the board as a journey worker electrician for at least four years or have equivalent experience in the trade.

HRS §448E-5 also describes minimum requirements for the journey worker level, including (effective July 1, 2013) experience in residential or commercial wiring of at least five years full-time (or equivalent), not less than 10,000 hours, under supervision, and satisfactory completion (accepted by a University of Hawaii community college offering an appropriate program of study) of 240 hours of electrical academic coursework.

Because Hawaii’s supervising eligibility is tied to time as a registered journey worker (or equivalent experience), your study approach should match the professional level expected: strong code application, disciplined calculations, and careful reading that avoids “simple mistakes” on test day.

Reference Books

  • National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 Paperback
    Included Book: Your modern code-cycle reference for this combo. Use it to build navigation skills, table confidence, and exception discipline while studying current NEC organization.
  • National Electrical Code (NEC) 2020
    Exam Reference: PSI’s Hawaii Candidate Information Bulletin states the exam is open book and that the examination center provides the NEC 2020 edition during testing.

Test Information and Study Materials

Supervising-level exams are performance tests. The biggest differences between a passing result and a frustrating retake are usually not “effort” issues—they’re process issues: slow searching, missed exceptions, table misreads, and rushed calculations.

This combo is built to improve the exact skills that prevent those problems.

1) Train code navigation like a job skill

Open-book doesn’t mean unlimited time. It means the Code is available, and your score depends on how efficiently you can use it. A simple way to build this skill is to practice with “first stop” discipline:

  • Step 1: Identify the topic before you touch the book.
  • Step 2: Decide where the answer should live (definitions, a chapter area, a specific article family, or a table).
  • Step 3: Locate the governing rule and read carefully.
  • Step 4: Check exceptions, notes, and conditions that change the outcome.

Use your NEC 2023 paperback to run short, timed lookups. Even if the exam provides NEC 2020, the navigation habits you build—how you recognize topics and locate rules—transfer directly.

2) Treat tables as their own skill

Tables are where points are won and lost quickly. Many missed questions come from grabbing a value without reading notes or applying the wrong condition. A simple “table checklist” helps prevent that:

  • Confirm you’re using the correct table for the question type.
  • Read the headings and notes before selecting values.
  • Confirm the scenario matches the table’s assumptions and conditions.

When you practice this consistently, tables become a strength—not a risk.

3) Make calculations predictable with a repeatable setup

Calculations become far less stressful when your setup method is consistent. That’s the purpose of your Electrician Calculations Study Guide: to help you standardize steps so you don’t improvise under pressure.

Train calculations using a reliable pattern:

  • Start with the target: what are you solving for?
  • List known values with units: volts, amps, watts, VA/kVA, and any conditions that affect the scenario.
  • Confirm the governing rule when needed: if the question is Code-driven, verify the requirement before computing.
  • Sanity-check results: if the number doesn’t make sense, verify the setup before moving on.

This reduces avoidable mistakes and improves speed naturally—because your steps become automatic.

4) Use a weekly routine that fits real life

Most electricians are studying around work. Consistency beats cramming. A practical routine that supports steady progress:

  • 2–3 days/week: Code navigation drills (short timed sets) + master study guide practice questions.
  • 2 days/week: Calculation sets (clean setups, careful units, fewer mistakes).
  • 1 day/week: Mixed practice (rotate categories and focus on what slowed you down during timed drills).

This approach keeps your prep structured, realistic, and performance-focused—exactly what supervising-level testing demands.

How 1 Exam Prep Helps You Reach Your Goal

1 Exam Prep supports electricians with a preparation approach built for real licensing exams: organized study guidance, practice-forward learning, and confidence-building structure. Instead of scattered studying, you get a focused path that helps you develop the habits that matter most for supervising/master-level success.

  • Organized study guidance that helps you stay focused on high-impact content and avoid wasting time on low-value review.
  • Trade-focused review that supports the supervising-level mindset—safe, compliant, and consistent application.
  • Practice-oriented preparation that trains question recognition and Code use, not just passive reading.
  • Calculation structure that helps you build a repeatable setup method and reduce avoidable math errors.
  • Confidence-building study rhythm that helps you track weak areas and improve week to week.

The goal is straightforward: help you show up with a plan you can execute—question after question—without getting slowed down by searching, second-guessing, or rushed calculations.

FAQ

Is “Master Electrician” the same as “Supervising Electrician” in Hawaii?

In Hawaii’s licensing structure, the supervising electrician license is the master-level credential used to direct and supervise electrical work and to perform electrical work, as described in PSI’s Hawaii electrician examinations bulletin.

How many questions are on the Hawaii Supervising Electrician exam?

PSI’s Candidate Information Bulletin lists the Supervising Electrician exam as 70 questions.

What score do I need to pass?

PSI lists the minimum passing score for the Supervising Electrician exam as 70%.

How long do I have to complete the exam?

PSI lists 180 minutes allowed for the Supervising Electrician exam.

Is the Hawaii Supervising Electrician exam open book?

Yes. PSI’s Hawaii bulletin states the examination is OPEN BOOK.

Which NEC edition is provided during the exam?

PSI’s Hawaii bulletin states the examination center provides the National Electrical Code, 2020 edition as reference material for the open-book exam.

What are Hawaii’s minimum eligibility requirements for the supervising electrician exam?

HRS §448E-5 states that to be eligible for the supervising electrician examination, an applicant must have been registered with the board as a journey worker electrician for at least four years or have equivalent experience in the trade.

Will this combo help with calculations?

Yes. The Electrician Calculations Study Guide is included to help you build consistent setups, improve accuracy, and reduce avoidable mistakes on math-driven questions.

How should I use the NEC 2023 paperback while studying if the exam uses NEC 2020?

Use the NEC 2023 to train navigation skills and Code structure familiarity through timed drills. Topic recognition, table confidence, and exception-checking habits transfer well when you sit for the exam using the NEC edition provided in the testing center.