New Mexico Residential and Commercial Electrical Part 1 (Commercial and Industrial) Contractor EE-98 - Books & Courses Rental Package is designed for candidates preparing for the commercial and industrial portion of the New Mexico EE-98 electrical contractor exam. This rental package combines electrical reference books with online course access so candidates can study the code material, review commercial and industrial electrical topics, and build stronger open-book navigation skills before exam day.
This books and courses rental package includes the listed electrical references: National Electrical Code, NEC, 2020, New Mexico Electrical Code (NMAC 14.10.4), 2020, and National Electrical Safety Code 2017. These references support preparation for electrical code interpretation, commercial wiring methods, industrial electrical systems, grounding and bonding, services, feeders, branch circuits, equipment, electrical safety concepts, New Mexico electrical provisions, utility-related electrical safety material, and open-book reference navigation.
The package also includes business books listed as Includes Lines 2-4. Candidates preparing for electrical contractor licensing should study the trade references for the technical exam and use the included business materials as part of a broader preparation routine when business and law content applies to their licensing path.
Commercial and industrial electrical exam preparation requires more than field experience with conduit, conductors, panels, equipment, services, feeders, motors, transformers, grounding, bonding, safety, or electrical installations. Candidates need to understand how the references are organized, how code language is written, how tables and exceptions are used, and how to locate information quickly during an open-book exam. This rental package supports that process by giving candidates rental access to the listed books along with structured online study support.
Please allow up to 15 business days for book & course rental package orders.
The New Mexico Residential and Commercial Electrical Part 1 (Commercial and Industrial) Contractor EE-98 exam is intended for candidates preparing to demonstrate knowledge of commercial and industrial electrical work, electrical code requirements, New Mexico electrical provisions, electrical safety standards, and open-book reference use. This books and courses rental package supports preparation using the listed references and online course access.
Important study areas include National Electrical Code organization, definitions, wiring methods, conductors, raceways, boxes, cabinets, services, feeders, branch circuits, overcurrent protection, grounding and bonding, motors, transformers, equipment installation, commercial electrical systems, industrial electrical systems, New Mexico electrical code provisions, National Electrical Safety Code material, electrical safety terminology, tables, calculations, notes, exceptions, and reference navigation.
National Electrical Code, NEC, 2020 supports core electrical code preparation. Candidates should become familiar with NEC chapter organization, Article 100 definitions, wiring and protection requirements, wiring methods and materials, equipment for general use, special occupancies where applicable, special equipment where applicable, tables, annex material where useful, and the structure of code language. Commercial and industrial questions may require candidates to locate exact sections, apply definitions, use tables, and read exceptions carefully.
New Mexico Electrical Code (NMAC 14.10.4), 2020 supports state-specific electrical preparation. Candidates should study this reference alongside the NEC so they can recognize New Mexico electrical provisions and understand how state code material connects to the broader electrical code reference. State-specific code questions can depend on exact wording, so candidates should practice locating and reading the relevant provisions during study.
National Electrical Safety Code 2017 supports preparation for electrical safety standards and utility-related electrical topics. Candidates should review the structure of the reference, electrical safety terminology, installation and maintenance safety concepts, clearance awareness, supply and communication line safety topics where applicable, and how this reference differs from the NEC. Knowing which reference applies to a question is an important part of open-book exam preparation.
The EE-98 Part 1 exam can involve questions that combine technical code knowledge with practical electrical decision-making. A question may describe a commercial installation, industrial equipment, conductor condition, grounding issue, service requirement, feeder arrangement, branch circuit condition, raceway method, motor installation, transformer condition, overcurrent protection issue, safety standard, or New Mexico electrical provision. Candidates should practice reading each question carefully, identifying the subject, selecting the correct reference, and confirming the answer from the book.
The New Mexico Residential and Commercial Electrical Part 1 (Commercial and Industrial) Contractor EE-98 examination is an open book test using approved references. Candidates are responsible for bringing their own approved reference materials to the examination center when required by testing instructions. This rental package includes the listed electrical references for study: National Electrical Code, NEC, 2020, New Mexico Electrical Code (NMAC 14.10.4), 2020, and National Electrical Safety Code 2017.
Open-book testing does not mean candidates can rely on searching the books for the first time during the exam. The most prepared candidates know how each reference is organized before test day. They understand how to use tables of contents, indexes, code articles, definitions, tables, notes, exceptions, annex material where useful, and reference terminology. They also understand whether a question is likely asking for NEC material, New Mexico electrical code material, or National Electrical Safety Code material.
Reference materials must be bound and may be highlighted, underlined, and indexed before the examination session. Permanent tabs are allowed. Temporary tabs, including Post-it notes, are not allowed and must be removed before the exam begins. Reference materials containing writing are not allowed into the examination, and candidates are not permitted to write in the references during the testing session.
This books and courses rental package supports open-book preparation by combining rental references with online course access. Candidates should use the books throughout the 6 months of course access so reference navigation becomes part of regular study. Repeated use of the books helps candidates locate definitions, tables, article sections, exceptions, grounding rules, conductor provisions, wiring method requirements, service rules, feeder rules, safety code material, and New Mexico provisions more confidently.
A strong open-book study routine connects every topic to a book location. When reviewing commercial wiring methods, candidates should practice finding the related NEC article. When reviewing New Mexico electrical provisions, they should use the New Mexico Electrical Code reference. When reviewing safety standard topics connected to the National Electrical Safety Code, they should practice using that reference directly. The goal is to make book navigation feel familiar before exam day.
Candidates preparing for the New Mexico Residential and Commercial Electrical Part 1 (Commercial and Industrial) Contractor EE-98 exam should begin by confirming that the EE-98 classification and Part 1 commercial and industrial exam match their licensing goal. Commercial and industrial electrical work can involve services, feeders, branch circuits, raceways, grounding and bonding, conductor installation, overcurrent protection, equipment, motors, transformers, electrical safety, and code interpretation.
A practical preparation path includes reviewing the EE-98 Part 1 exam focus, gathering required information, completing the proper application or approval process when required, scheduling the exam, studying the listed rental references, using the online course, practicing open-book navigation, preparing for any additional required exam, and arriving at the test center with proper identification and approved materials. Candidates should also review all testing instructions before exam day.
Because electrical contractor exams are code-focused, candidates should build a study routine around the actual books. Reading general summaries alone is not enough. Candidates should spend time inside the NEC, New Mexico Electrical Code, and National Electrical Safety Code, moving from topic to topic, finding definitions, using tables, reviewing exceptions, reading state-specific provisions, and practicing how to answer questions directly from reference material.
EE-98 Part 1 questions often contain details that affect the correct answer, such as conductor type, raceway type, service size, feeder condition, grounding path, bonding requirement, overcurrent device, motor load, transformer condition, equipment location, commercial occupancy, industrial equipment, safety clearance, or code-defined term. Candidates should practice identifying the key subject before opening a book. This helps them choose the correct reference and avoid losing time in the wrong section.
Preparation should also include steady review of electrical terminology. Many exam questions depend on understanding the wording of the question before locating the answer. Candidates should know how definitions affect code interpretation and should avoid answering only from habit. The online course structure helps candidates focus their review and develop a more methodical approach to studying the references.
New Mexico EE-98 Part 1 commercial and industrial electrical preparation requires study of model electrical code material, New Mexico electrical code provisions, and electrical safety standard material. This rental package includes the National Electrical Code, New Mexico Electrical Code, and National Electrical Safety Code, along with business books listed as Includes Lines 2-4 and 6 months of course access.
The New Mexico Electrical Code (NMAC 14.10.4), 2020 supports state-specific electrical code review. Candidates should become familiar with the structure of this reference and should study it alongside the National Electrical Code, NEC, 2020. This combination helps candidates prepare for both broad electrical code organization and New Mexico electrical provisions.
The National Electrical Code, NEC, 2020 supports technical electrical code preparation for commercial and industrial work. Candidates should review definitions, wiring and protection, wiring methods and materials, equipment, conductor requirements, grounding and bonding, services, feeders, branch circuits, overcurrent protection, motors, transformers, tables, notes, and exceptions.
The National Electrical Safety Code 2017 supports preparation for electrical safety standard topics. Candidates should become familiar with the organization of this reference and how it differs from the NEC. Exam preparation should include the ability to recognize when a question is asking about NEC installation code material and when it is asking about National Electrical Safety Code material.
Candidates should also use the included business books listed as Includes Lines 2-4 when preparing for licensing-related business topics that apply to their path. Business preparation may support the broader licensing process, while the electrical references support the technical EE-98 Part 1 exam preparation.
Exam preparation is only one part of the overall process. Candidates may need to complete application steps, meet eligibility requirements, submit documentation, follow testing instructions, and comply with state or program requirements connected to the EE-98 classification. This package supports preparation through rental references and online study guidance.
These rental references should be used throughout the 6 months of course access. Candidates should become familiar with the organization of each book, the major topic areas, and the difference between the NEC, New Mexico electrical code provisions, and National Electrical Safety Code material. Strong reference familiarity helps candidates work more efficiently during open-book testing.
Because this package includes both rental books and online course access, candidates should use the course while keeping the books available. The books provide the source material, while the online preparation helps organize review, identify study areas, and build more confident open-book reference navigation.
New Mexico EE-98 Part 1 books and courses rental preparation should focus on both electrical code knowledge and reference navigation. Candidates should study commercial and industrial electrical topics, National Electrical Code organization, New Mexico electrical provisions, National Electrical Safety Code material, business books listed as Includes Lines 2-4, and the layout of every included rental reference.
NEC preparation should include regular work in the National Electrical Code, NEC, 2020. Candidates should review Article 100 definitions, wiring and protection, wiring methods and materials, equipment for general use, conductors, raceways, boxes, cabinets, services, feeders, branch circuits, grounding and bonding, overcurrent protection, motors, transformers, tables, notes, exceptions, and article organization. Commercial and industrial questions may require candidates to apply the NEC carefully and confirm the exact section before choosing an answer.
New Mexico electrical preparation should include the New Mexico Electrical Code (NMAC 14.10.4), 2020. Candidates should review the structure of the New Mexico reference and practice locating state-specific electrical provisions. Studying state material alongside the NEC helps candidates become more comfortable moving between the model code and New Mexico electrical requirements.
Safety code preparation should include the National Electrical Safety Code 2017. Candidates should review the structure of the reference, terminology, safety concepts, clearance awareness, supply and communication line topics where applicable, tables, and rule organization. NESC material should be studied as a separate reference so candidates know when to use it.
Commercial and industrial electrical preparation should include service and feeder concepts, branch circuit requirements, conductor selection, raceway methods, equipment installation, grounding and bonding, overcurrent protection, motors, transformers, electrical safety, and code calculations where applicable. Candidates should practice finding the correct article or table rather than relying only on memory.
Business books listed as Includes Lines 2-4 should be used for licensing-related business study when applicable. Candidates should keep the technical electrical exam preparation organized separately from business and law preparation so they can focus on the right material during each study session.
Reference navigation should be practiced throughout the 6 months of course access. Candidates should learn how to move from the table of contents to the correct article, use the index effectively, locate definitions, read tables carefully, follow exceptions, compare related code sections, and confirm exact code language before choosing an answer. For New Mexico code provisions and NESC material, candidates should practice using each reference directly instead of assuming the NEC will answer every question.
A helpful study routine is to organize topics by electrical system area. Candidates can study definitions in one session, wiring methods in another, services separately, feeders separately, branch circuits in another session, grounding and bonding separately, overcurrent protection separately, motors and transformers in another session, New Mexico code provisions separately, and NESC material in a focused session. After each topic review, candidates should practice locating the applicable sections in the correct reference.
The most effective open-book preparation combines familiarity, repetition, and careful reading. Candidates should know where major commercial and industrial electrical topics are located, how the references explain them, and how to confirm answers from the books. This books and courses rental package is designed to make that process more organized through rental references and online course access.
1 Exam Prep helps candidates prepare with organized, code-focused support designed around the way open-book electrical contractor exams are actually taken. For the New Mexico Residential and Commercial Electrical Part 1 (Commercial and Industrial) Contractor EE-98 exam, preparation is not only about having the listed books. It is about learning how to use those references, recognize key terms, locate sections quickly, and apply NEC, New Mexico electrical code, NESC, and commercial and industrial electrical knowledge with confidence.
This books and courses rental package supports candidates through rental references, 6 months of course access, organized study guidance, trade-focused review, practice-oriented preparation, business books listed as Includes Lines 2-4, and reference navigation. Students can focus their review on National Electrical Code provisions, New Mexico electrical code provisions, National Electrical Safety Code material, services, feeders, branch circuits, raceways, conductors, grounding and bonding, overcurrent protection, motors, transformers, commercial systems, industrial systems, definitions, tables, calculations, notes, exceptions, and open-book reference use.
1 Exam Prepās approach is practical and exam-oriented. The goal is to help candidates reduce confusion, organize their study routine, and build confidence through repeated reference navigation and code-focused review. Candidates still need to study consistently and understand the material, but having the rental references and course access together can make the preparation process more manageable and focused.
Many EE-98 Part 1 candidates have commercial electrical, industrial electrical, service, installation, maintenance, troubleshooting, conduit, wiring, panel, motor, transformer, safety, or field experience but are less familiar with moving through several references under exam pressure. 1 Exam Prep helps support that transition by encouraging reference familiarity, organized study habits, practice-oriented preparation, and a clearer plan for exam-day book navigation.
The course structure also helps candidates avoid common study problems. Instead of focusing only on familiar field topics, candidates are encouraged to review the full reference set. Instead of assuming an answer from experience, candidates practice confirming answers from code language. Instead of waiting until the exam to learn the books, candidates build reference navigation into their study routine from the beginning.
This package includes rental access to National Electrical Code, NEC, 2020; New Mexico Electrical Code (NMAC 14.10.4), 2020; and National Electrical Safety Code 2017. It also includes business books listed as Includes Lines 2-4 and 6 months of course access.
The package price is $1,010, plus a $450 refundable deposit, for a total of $1,460.
This package includes 6 months of course access.
Please allow up to 15 business days for book & course rental package orders.
Yes. This package is designed for candidates preparing for the New Mexico Residential and Commercial Electrical Part 1 (Commercial and Industrial) Contractor EE-98 exam using the listed electrical references.
Yes. The exam is an open-book test using approved references. Candidates should bring only approved materials and follow all testing center rules.
Reference navigation is important because the exam is open book. Candidates should know how to locate definitions, articles, tables, exceptions, New Mexico provisions, NESC material, and code language quickly so they can confirm answers directly from the approved references.
Reference materials containing writing are not allowed into the examination, and candidates are not permitted to write in the references during the testing session. Highlighting, underlining, indexing, and permanent tabs are allowed.
No. Temporary tabs, including Post-it notes, are not allowed and must be removed before the exam begins. Permanent tabs are allowed.
No product can guarantee an exam result. This package supports candidates through rental references, course access, organized code review, trade-focused study guidance, practice-oriented preparation, and open-book reference navigation.