The Arizona Swimming Pools, Including Solar Residential Contractor (B-6) Highlighted & Tabbed Books Allowed into Exam Package is designed for candidates preparing for the Arizona B-6 swimming pools, including solar residential contractor exam who want the approved exam-room reference books organized before test day. This package focuses on the books allowed into the exam room for this classification: Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA), International Building Code, 2018, and International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018.
Residential swimming pool construction requires practical knowledge of plan reading, estimating, sitework, excavation, forming, reinforcing, concrete, shotcrete, pool shells, pool equipment, piping coordination, electrical coordination awareness, barriers, drainage, decking coordination, access, safety, and jobsite sequencing. Because this classification includes solar, candidates should also prepare for pool-related solar awareness where it connects to pool heating equipment, circulation, piping coordination, equipment placement, roof or equipment access, temperature control, supports, penetrations, and safe residential jobsite practices.
This highlighted and tabbed books package supports open-book exam preparation by organizing the listed exam-room references before the exam. Permanent tabs and highlighting can help candidates move more efficiently through OSHA construction safety standards, International Building Code provisions, and International Residential Code requirements. For a residential swimming pools including solar contractor exam, organized references can help candidates connect field experience with excavation safety, concrete and shotcrete work, pool equipment, solar-related pool system awareness, residential code navigation, building code awareness, and jobsite hazard control.
Please allow up to 15 business days for tabbed and highlighted books allowed into exam package orders. This processing window supports preparation of the books before shipment or fulfillment. Candidates should plan ahead so they have time to receive the books, study with them, and become familiar with the tabs, highlighted sections, chapter structure, indexes, tables, definitions, and major subject areas before test day.
The Arizona B-6 exam is open book, but open-book testing still requires preparation. Candidates should know how to use each reference, understand residential swimming pool construction concepts, understand pool-related solar coordination, and practice locating information quickly. Highlighted and tabbed books can support study and exam-day reference navigation, but they work best when candidates use them consistently before the test.
The Arizona Swimming Pools, Including Solar Residential Contractor (B-6) trade exam measures knowledge related to residential swimming pool construction, solar-related pool system awareness, plan reading, estimating, sitework, excavation, forming, reinforcing, concrete, shotcrete, pool equipment, safety, building code use, and residential code use. Candidates should prepare for both trade-practice questions and reference-based questions involving the listed OSHA, International Building Code, and International Residential Code books.
The Arizona swimming pools trade exam includes 50 questions, allows 120 minutes, and requires a minimum passing score of 70%. The exam content outline includes plan reading and estimating with 3 items; sitework and excavation with 9 items; forming and reinforcing with 9 items; concrete with 8 items; shotcrete with 8 items; pool equipment with 8 items; and safety with 5 items.
The references included in this package support important portions of B-6 preparation. OSHA 29 CFR Part 1926 helps candidates review construction safety topics that may apply to swimming pool and solar-related pool work, including excavation and trenching awareness, personal protective equipment, ladders, scaffolds, fall hazards, roof or equipment access, concrete construction safety, reinforcing steel awareness, hand and power tools, material handling, housekeeping, and jobsite hazard recognition. The International Building Code, 2018 helps candidates review general building provisions that may apply to pool construction, barriers, access, concrete coordination, materials, loads, inspections awareness, and building safety. The International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018 helps candidates review residential construction provisions, including one- and two-family dwelling pool-related topics, barriers, access, safety provisions, and residential project coordination.
B-6 preparation should include both field-based knowledge and reference navigation. A candidate may need to understand excavation safety, review concrete placement conditions, identify reinforcing concerns, interpret plan information, evaluate pool shell preparation, understand shotcrete application awareness, review pool equipment topics, recognize solar-related pool equipment coordination, locate residential code information, or determine whether a question points to OSHA, the IBC, or the IRC. Highlighted and tabbed books can help candidates practice locating these topics in a more organized way.
The Arizona Swimming Pools, Including Solar Residential Contractor (B-6) trade exam is an open-book test. This package is focused on the books allowed into the exam room for this classification: Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA), International Building Code, 2018, and International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018.
Open-book testing rewards candidates who prepare with the references ahead of time. The highlighted and tabbed format can make study sessions more organized, but candidates should still practice using the books. Study should include locating definitions, reviewing safety provisions, checking swimming pool construction and building code topics, reviewing residential construction provisions, reviewing excavation and concrete safety, and becoming comfortable with indexes, tables, terminology, and chapter organization.
Reference materials may be highlighted, underlined, annotated, and indexed before the examination session. References may not be written in during the exam. Additional loose or attached papers are not permitted with approved references. Permanent tabs are allowed. Temporary removable tabs are not allowed. Candidates may use a silent, nonprinting, non-programmable calculator in the examination center.
For the B-6 exam, candidates should know when to use each reference. OSHA is used for construction safety and jobsite hazard questions, including excavation, fall protection, ladders, scaffolds, personal protective equipment, concrete construction safety, reinforcing steel awareness, material handling, roof or equipment access, tools, and housekeeping. The International Building Code is used for general building code questions involving pool-related construction provisions, barriers, concrete coordination, materials, access, and building safety. The International Residential Code is used for residential code questions involving one- and two-family dwelling provisions, residential pool-related code navigation, barriers, and safety provisions.
Arizona contractor licensing is handled through the Arizona Registrar of Contractors. Candidates should begin by selecting the correct license classification for the work they plan to perform. The B-6 classification applies to residential swimming pools, including solar contractor work within the allowed Arizona license scope.
After selecting the correct classification, candidates should review the examination requirements connected to the license. The B-6 trade exam is one part of the licensing process. Contractor applicants may also need to complete the Arizona business management or statutes and rules requirement, application requirements, qualifying party requirements, bonding requirements, experience requirements, and other items required by the Arizona Registrar of Contractors.
Exam preparation and application preparation should be treated as separate tasks. Exam preparation focuses on swimming pool trade knowledge, open-book reference navigation, OSHA safety, building code, residential code, plan reading, estimating, sitework, excavation, forming, reinforcing, concrete, shotcrete, pool equipment, solar-related pool system awareness, drainage, barriers, access, safety, material handling, equipment coordination, and jobsite hazard recognition. Application preparation focuses on state forms, business information, qualifying party documentation, bond requirements, fees, and licensing submission requirements.
This highlighted and tabbed books package supports the exam preparation side of the process. It gives candidates the listed exam-room references in an organized format so they can study directly from the books they plan to use. Candidates should use the books consistently before exam day so the tabs, highlighting, chapter layout, and code organization become familiar.
The Arizona Registrar of Contractors issues licenses by classification. Residential classifications apply to residential work, commercial classifications apply to commercial work, and dual classifications may apply when a contractor qualifies for both residential and commercial work. The B-6 classification is the residential swimming pools, including solar contractor classification.
Residential swimming pool work can include pool construction activities within the allowed Arizona license scope. Candidates preparing for the B-6 exam should understand the safety, code, and trade knowledge involved in pool layout, excavation, forming, reinforcing, concrete placement, shotcrete, pool shells, pool equipment, piping coordination, solar-related pool heating awareness, access, barriers, drainage, site preparation, inspections, and residential jobsite coordination.
Residential swimming pool projects often involve homeowners, backyard access, remodel conditions, landscaping protection, existing utilities, property protection, site drainage, one- and two-family dwelling code provisions, and customer-facing communication. Work may require coordination with excavation, concrete, plumbing, electrical, deck, fencing, landscaping, solar-related equipment, and inspection teams depending on the project.
The solar portion of this classification should be approached through pool-related solar awareness, such as system layout, pool heating equipment coordination, piping coordination, circulation, temperature control, roof or equipment access, supports, penetrations, and safe installation practices. Candidates should connect solar-related pool review with OSHA safety, pool equipment knowledge, building code awareness, residential code awareness, and the practical sequencing of residential swimming pool construction.
Swimming pool contractors should understand the limits of their classification and work within the scope issued by the state. Work outside the classification may require another properly licensed contractor. Pool projects may involve coordination with excavation, concrete, electrical, plumbing, mechanical, landscaping, fencing, decking, waterproofing, solar, general building, and inspection teams depending on project conditions.
Passing the trade exam is not the same as receiving a license. Applicants are responsible for meeting the full Arizona licensing requirements that apply to the classification, qualifying party, business entity, bond, application, and related state requirements. This package supports preparation by providing the listed highlighted and tabbed books allowed into the B-6 exam room.
The Arizona B-6 exam requires preparation across plan reading, estimating, sitework, excavation, forming, reinforcing, concrete, shotcrete, pool equipment, solar-related pool system awareness, building code, residential code, OSHA safety, and residential jobsite coordination. Candidates should use the highlighted and tabbed books as part of a broader study plan that includes trade review and reference practice.
OSHA preparation should include personal protective equipment, excavation and trenching safety, ladders, scaffolds, fall protection, concrete construction safety awareness, reinforcing steel awareness, hand and power tools, material handling, housekeeping, electrical hazard awareness, struck-by hazards, caught-between hazards, equipment movement, roof or equipment access, and general construction safety. Swimming pool construction can involve open excavations, deep work areas, concrete placement, reinforcing steel, shotcrete, pumps, trucks, tools, water hazards, and changing residential jobsite conditions.
International Building Code preparation should include general building provisions, pool-related construction requirements, barriers, access, materials, concrete coordination, building safety, and general code navigation. Candidates should practice locating pool and building topics using the table of contents, index, definitions, and chapter organization.
International Residential Code preparation should include one- and two-family dwelling provisions, residential pool-related code topics, safety barriers, access, concrete coordination, and residential construction requirements. Candidates should study the IRC carefully because this is a residential swimming pool classification and residential code navigation is an important part of preparation.
Plan reading and estimating preparation should include pool layout, dimensions, elevations, excavation quantities, concrete quantities, shotcrete awareness, reinforcing quantities, pool equipment placement, piping routes, solar-related equipment coordination, decking coordination, barriers, access, and material planning. Candidates should understand how pool drawings communicate the relationship between the shell, equipment, site, utilities, and surrounding construction.
Sitework preparation should include layout, staking, access, existing utilities, grading, soil conditions, drainage, equipment movement, spoil placement, property protection, and coordination with other trades. A residential pool project begins with proper site planning, and errors early in the process can affect the entire installation.
Excavation preparation should include excavation depth, wall stability awareness, soil conditions, utility coordination, access, trenching, equipment operation awareness, spoil placement, water control, and worker safety. Pool excavations can create major safety hazards and should be studied carefully with OSHA.
Forming and reinforcing preparation should include layout, dimensions, bracing, support, elevation control, penetrations, steps, benches, bond beam awareness, reinforcing steel placement, spacing, lap awareness, ties, cover awareness, and inspection readiness. Reinforcement must remain in position during concrete or shotcrete placement so the pool shell can perform as intended.
Concrete and shotcrete preparation should include placement awareness, mix coordination, consolidation awareness, curing awareness, surface preparation, nozzleman coordination, lift awareness, rebound awareness, thickness awareness, weather conditions, and protection of the installed shell. Shotcrete is a major pool construction topic because it is commonly used to create pool shells.
Pool equipment preparation should include pumps, filters, heaters where applicable, piping coordination, valves, drains, returns, skimmers, circulation awareness, equipment pads, access, service clearance, bonding and electrical coordination awareness, and startup readiness. Residential pool equipment layouts may be compact, but candidates should still understand access, serviceability, and system coordination.
Solar-related pool preparation should include pool heating equipment awareness, piping coordination, circulation, valves, temperature control, roof or equipment access, supports, penetrations, equipment placement, service access, and safe installation practices. Candidates should understand how solar-related pool systems must be coordinated with pool equipment, piping, electrical work, roofing or equipment support, and safe jobsite practices.
Barrier and access preparation should include pool area protection, access control, gates, fencing awareness, residential safety concerns, worksite protection, and finished pool safety features. Pool projects often involve both construction-phase hazards and completed-project safety requirements.
Residential jobsite preparation should include homeowner communication, backyard access, landscaping protection, existing utilities, limited equipment access, property protection, cleanup, noise awareness, and coordination with residential trades. Candidates should understand that residential pool work often happens close to existing homes, walls, landscaping, neighboring properties, and customer-occupied spaces.
Using highlighted and tabbed books effectively requires practice. Candidates should spend time opening each reference, locating the highlighted areas, reviewing the tabs, reading surrounding safety or code language, and understanding why each section matters. Tabs and highlighting are tools for navigation, not a substitute for learning the material.
During study, candidates should practice identifying the best reference for each topic. A safety question may point to OSHA. A general building code or pool construction question may point to the International Building Code. A residential pool-related code question may point to the International Residential Code. A trade-practice question may require swimming pool construction and solar-related pool system knowledge supported by careful review of excavation, forming, reinforcing, concrete, shotcrete, pool equipment, and jobsite coordination topics. Knowing which book to open first can save valuable exam time.
1 Exam Prep helps Arizona contractor candidates prepare with organized study support, trade-focused review, reference navigation tools, and practical exam preparation resources. For the Arizona Swimming Pools, Including Solar Residential Contractor (B-6) exam, this highlighted and tabbed package supports candidates by providing the listed books allowed into the exam room in an organized format.
Many experienced pool professionals understand field work but still need support with the open-book testing format. Contractor exams require careful reading, time management, and the ability to connect each question to the correct safety standard, building code section, residential code provision, or trade concept. Highlighted and tabbed references can help candidates build a more efficient study routine and become more comfortable navigating the books.
1 Exam Prep prepares books with the exam experience in mind. The goal is to make it easier for candidates to study from the same references they will rely on during the exam. Candidates can use the tabs and highlighting to review major subjects, practice locating information, and build confidence with the organization of OSHA, the International Building Code, and the International Residential Code.
This package is promotional but practical. It does not guarantee a passing score, license approval, state approval, or any exam outcome. It gives candidates organized exam-room reference books that can support study, review, and open-book preparation for the Arizona B-6 swimming pools, including solar residential contractor exam.
This package is for candidates preparing for the Arizona Swimming Pools, Including Solar Residential Contractor (B-6) exam who need the listed highlighted and tabbed books allowed into the exam room.
This package includes Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA), International Building Code, 2018, and International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018.
Yes. This package is for highlighted and tabbed books allowed into the exam room for the Arizona B-6 swimming pools, including solar residential contractor exam.
Please allow up to 15 business days for tabbed and highlighted books allowed into exam package orders.
Yes. The Arizona B-6 swimming pools, including solar residential contractor exam is open book and allows approved references into the examination center.
The Arizona swimming pools trade exam includes 50 questions.
The exam allows 120 minutes.
The minimum passing score is 70%.
Candidates should study plan reading, estimating, sitework, excavation, forming, reinforcing, concrete, shotcrete, pool equipment, solar-related pool system awareness, safety, building code provisions, residential code provisions, and OSHA safety.
OSHA is included because swimming pool construction can involve excavation, trenching, fall hazards, ladders, scaffolds, concrete construction, reinforcing steel, material handling, tools, equipment hazards, roof or equipment access, and jobsite safety concerns.
The International Building Code supports general building code topics, while the International Residential Code supports residential pool-related code navigation and one- and two-family dwelling provisions.
No. This package includes the listed exam-room books only. Solar-related preparation should be studied through pool equipment, jobsite safety, code navigation, and trade topics connected to this classification.
No. Highlighted and tabbed books support reference navigation, but candidates should still study the trade topics, practice using the references, and review exam-style questions before test day.
No. References may be highlighted, underlined, annotated, and indexed before the exam, but they may not be written in during the examination session.
No. Permanent tabs are allowed. Temporary removable tabs are not allowed in the examination center.
No. This package supports preparation and reference navigation. It does not guarantee a passing score, license approval, state approval, or any exam outcome.