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

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

Regular price $279.95
Sale price $279.95 Regular price $315.00
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.

CALL TO ASK ABOUT FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE

  • image-right
Customer Reviews
View full details

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

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

If you’re preparing for a Tennessee master-level electrical exam or contractor-level electrical testing, your best study sessions usually come down to two things: (1) knowing where answers live in the National Electrical Code (NEC) and (2) being able to work through calculations quickly and accurately under exam pressure. This combo is built to support both.

The 2023 Tennessee Master Electrician Study Guide + 2023 Electrician Calculations Study Guide + National Electrical Code 2023 Paperback set gives you a practical way to study the code, sharpen your electrical math, and rehearse the kinds of decisions electricians make on real projects—sizing conductors, verifying overcurrent protection, applying demand factors, checking box fill, and more—using a 2023 NEC foundation.

Because many electrical exams reward speed just as much as knowledge, this package is designed to help you build repeatable habits: finding code sections fast, reading questions carefully, setting up calculations cleanly, and avoiding the time traps that cost points. Whether you’ve been in the field for years or you’re moving up into higher-responsibility work, the goal is the same—study with structure, practice with purpose, and walk into exam day feeling prepared and organized.

What You Get

  • 2023 Tennessee Master Electrician Study Guide
    Master-level review support built around a 2023 NEC approach, helping you practice code navigation, application-style questions, and the decision-making skills tested on higher-level electrical exams.
  • 2023 Electrician Calculations Study Guide
    Focused practice for the math-driven side of electrical testing—helpful for building confidence with formulas, multi-step problem setups, and common calculation categories seen in electrician and contractor exams.
  • National Electrical Code 2023 Paperback
    Your core reference book for code lookups and rule application based on the 2023 NEC edition.

Exam Details

In Tennessee, electrical licensing and testing can involve different pathways depending on the license type and the work you perform. At the contractor level, the Tennessee Board for Licensing Contractors oversees contractor licensing and uses PSI to administer examinations. Tennessee contractor applicants are typically required to take the Tennessee Business and Law exam, while a trade exam is required for certain classifications. PSI-administered exams are generally time-sensitive, and Tennessee notes that exam approvals are typically valid for a limited period (commonly two years) for licensing purposes.

Tennessee also recognizes the NASCLA Accredited Examination Program (including an Electrical exam option) as a way to reduce redundant testing for contractors who need to be licensed across multiple jurisdictions, depending on eligibility and the licensing path you choose.

Separately, Tennessee has a Limited Licensed Electrician (LLE) credential for electricians performing work in municipalities using the Division of Fire Prevention for permits or inspections, and it applies to projects below a specified dollar threshold per project. In addition to state-level credentials, local jurisdictions may also issue electrician licenses (including master-level designations) depending on where you work.

This combo is built for students who want a 2023 NEC-based study system that strengthens both code knowledge and calculation performance—two areas that show up consistently across master-level and contractor-oriented electrical testing.

Open Book Test

Many contractor examinations administered by PSI for Tennessee are conducted in an open-book format with approved reference materials allowed in the examination center. When your exam allows a codebook, your score often depends on how efficiently you can navigate the NEC—not just whether you “know” the rule.

That’s why this combo is built around two complementary skills:

  • Code navigation under time pressure: locating the right article, section, table, or definition quickly, then confirming you’re applying the correct rule to the question being asked.
  • Calculation accuracy: translating a scenario into a clean setup, using the correct units and assumptions, and landing on a result that matches code intent and practical installation reality.

How to study for an open-book electrical exam with this combo:

  • Practice “find-first” habits: Instead of guessing, train yourself to identify keywords in the question and go straight to the right NEC area.
  • Build a personal lookup map: As you study, note which code chapters and tables you return to repeatedly (raceways, grounding and bonding, conductor ampacity, demand factors, box fill, motor calculations, etc.).
  • Rehearse timed sets: Even short, timed practice blocks can improve speed and reduce second-guessing.
  • Pair code with calculations: Many problems are “code + math.” Use the calculations guide to get faster with the math, then confirm the NEC rule that governs the scenario.

Licensing Steps

Because Tennessee electrical licensing can vary based on the type of work (contracting vs. limited licensing vs. local electrician licensing), it helps to think in clear steps:

  1. Identify the license path that matches your work.
    For contractor-level work, licensing and exams are handled through the Tennessee Board for Licensing Contractors. For certain municipalities and smaller projects, the LLE credential may apply. Local jurisdictions may also have master-level electrician licensing pathways.
  2. Confirm your exam requirements.
    Tennessee contractor applicants typically take the Tennessee Business and Law exam, and a trade exam may be required for certain classifications. PSI administers contractor exams for the state.
  3. Build a study plan around your exam’s reference edition.
    This combo is based on the 2023 NEC and is ideal when your exam references the 2023 edition or when your work requires strong 2023 NEC familiarity.
  4. Train for performance, not just knowledge.
    Use the master-level study guide to practice application-style code questions and the calculations guide to improve speed and accuracy on math-heavy topics.
  5. Schedule, prepare, and test with confidence.
    As your date approaches, shift from “learning mode” to “exam mode” by working timed practice sessions and tightening your reference navigation.

State Requirements

Tennessee electrical licensing and oversight commonly involves the Tennessee Department of Commerce and Insurance through the Board for Licensing Contractors for contractor licensing, including electrical classifications. Tennessee’s contractor exam information confirms that PSI administers exams for the Board, that all contractor applicants are required to take the Tennessee Business and Law exam, and that the trade exam is only required for certain license classifications.

For Limited Licensed Electricians (LLE), Tennessee states that the LLE license is only required when performing work in a municipality utilizing the Division of Fire Prevention for permits or inspections, and it covers work under a per-project maximum. Tennessee also notes that an LLE license does not authorize a person to act as a contractor, which is an important distinction when choosing the correct credential for your scope of work.

Because local jurisdictions can have additional requirements (including local master-level licensing), this combo is built to support the core competencies that travel well across exam types: strong NEC navigation, confident electrical calculations, and practical interpretation of code-driven scenarios.

Reference Books

  • National Electrical Code 2023 Paperback
    The NEC is the foundation for modern electrical safety standards and is a primary reference for many electrician and contractor exams. This paperback edition is designed for day-to-day use as you practice code lookups, tables, and definitions while studying.
  • 2023 Tennessee Master Electrician Study Guide
    A study-focused companion that helps you turn NEC reading into exam-ready skills by emphasizing how to interpret questions, locate the correct code support, and apply rules to realistic electrical scenarios.
  • 2023 Electrician Calculations Study Guide
    A calculations-focused workbook designed to strengthen the math that shows up frequently on electrical exams—helpful for improving setup consistency, unit discipline, and speed.

Test Information and Study Materials

Electrical exams can feel broad because electricity is broad: code rules, safety principles, installation methods, and calculations often appear in the same test. Most candidates improve fastest when they stop studying in “random order” and start training by skill category.

Here are high-value study categories this combo supports:

  • NEC structure and navigation: understanding how the code is organized (chapters, articles, parts, tables, annexes) so you can move confidently through the book.
  • Definitions and scope: recognizing when Article scope, definitions, and general requirements change how you interpret the rest of a question.
  • Wiring methods and installation rules: applying requirements for raceways, cables, fittings, and general wiring practices.
  • Grounding and bonding logic: knowing where to look and how to confirm conductor sizing, bonding requirements, and equipment grounding concepts.
  • Load calculations: setting up dwelling and commercial loads, applying demand factors when applicable, and keeping your work organized.
  • Overcurrent protection and conductor sizing: connecting ampacity, temperature ratings, and protection rules with real-world choices.
  • Motors and equipment calculations: working through the multi-step problems that often slow test-takers down.

A practical weekly approach:

  • Days 1–2: Code navigation drills (short sets). Focus on finding the right section fast and confirming what the question is truly asking.
  • Days 3–4: Calculations practice. Keep your work neat and repeat the same problem types until your setup is automatic.
  • Day 5: Mixed review (code + math). Combine lookup and calculations the way the exam does.
  • Day 6: Timed session. Train pacing and reduce time traps.
  • Day 7: Light review and reset. Note your weak areas and plan the next week’s focus.

How 1 Exam Prep Helps You Reach Your Goal

1 Exam Prep is built around one idea: strong results come from organized practice, not just more studying. This combo supports you with a clear structure for how electricians actually learn the code and calculations—by working problems, correcting mistakes, and repeating the process until your weak spots become reliable strengths.

Here’s what that looks like in real study time:

  • Trade-focused preparation: Study materials designed around the way electrical questions are asked—scenario-based, practical, and rooted in code application.
  • Practice-oriented learning: Instead of passively reading, you build speed and confidence by actively solving and verifying.
  • Reference navigation support: When the NEC is part of your exam strategy, learning how to locate the right rule is a skill you can train—and improve quickly with consistent practice.
  • Confidence-building structure: A repeatable system helps you stay consistent even with a busy work schedule, so preparation doesn’t feel overwhelming.

The goal isn’t to overload you with information. It’s to help you study with purpose, strengthen the skills that matter most, and walk into your exam feeling ready to work the questions efficiently.

FAQ

Who is this combo best for?

This set is ideal for electricians preparing for a Tennessee master-level exam path, contractor-level electrical testing, or anyone who wants a 2023 NEC-based study system that combines code practice with calculations improvement.

Does this include the NEC codebook?

Yes. This combo includes the National Electrical Code 2023 Paperback along with the two 2023 study guides.

Is this only for Tennessee?

The Tennessee Master Electrician Study Guide is positioned for Tennessee-oriented preparation, but the NEC and calculations content are widely relevant because code navigation and electrical math show up across many electrician and contractor exams.

Will this help with calculations-heavy questions?

Yes. The Electrician Calculations Study Guide is designed to help you practice and improve on the math-driven parts of electrical testing, which often includes multi-step setups and careful unit handling.

Is the exam open book?

Many Tennessee contractor examinations administered by PSI are open-book with approved references allowed. This combo supports open-book performance by strengthening NEC navigation and building speed on calculations.

Do I need to be fast with the NEC?

If your exam allows reference materials, speed matters. Most test-takers lose time by searching too broadly. Training yourself to identify keywords and go straight to the right NEC section is one of the most valuable improvements you can make.

Can I use this set for work reference after the exam?

Yes. Many electricians keep the NEC and calculations practice concepts as ongoing references, especially for sharpening load calculation habits and reinforcing code lookups that come up in real projects.