New Orleans Louisiana New Orleans First Class Stationary Refrigeration Contractor (ICC - 635-LA) Books & Courses Rental Package

New Orleans Louisiana New Orleans First Class Stationary Refrigeration Contractor (ICC - 635-LA) Books & Courses Rental Package

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New Orleans Louisiana New Orleans First Class Stationary Refrigeration Contractor (ICC - 635-LA) Books & Courses Rental Package

The New Orleans Louisiana New Orleans First Class Stationary Refrigeration Contractor (ICC - 635-LA) Books & Courses Rental Package is designed for candidates preparing for the stationary refrigeration contractor exam with both rental reference books and structured online course access. This package gives students the study materials needed to prepare with the NFPA 70: National Electrical Code, 2014 Edition, the International Mechanical Code, 2015, and Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning, 22nd edition, along with 6 months of course access to support organized exam preparation.

First Class Stationary Refrigeration Contractor exam preparation requires more than field experience. Refrigeration work may feel familiar on the job, but exam questions often depend on exact reference language, code organization, definitions, installation conditions, electrical requirements, mechanical equipment requirements, ventilation rules, access and clearance rules, refrigeration principles, system operation, controls, service concepts, and troubleshooting fundamentals. The correct answer is the answer that matches the reference material and the exact condition described in the question.

This rental package helps candidates prepare using the references connected to the New Orleans Louisiana First Class Stationary Refrigeration Contractor ICC 635-LA exam path. The NFPA 70: National Electrical Code, 2014 Edition supports electrical code preparation for equipment, wiring methods, grounding, bonding, overcurrent protection, conductors, motors, controllers, disconnects, and safe electrical installation practices. The International Mechanical Code, 2015 supports code-based preparation for HVACR systems, mechanical equipment, ventilation, exhaust, duct systems, combustion air, chimneys, vents, equipment access, clearances, and mechanical installation requirements. Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning, 22nd edition supports technical refrigeration preparation, including refrigeration cycles, system operation, components, controls, service concepts, troubleshooting, pressures, temperatures, and practical HVACR knowledge.

The online course access adds structure to the study process. Instead of reading randomly through the references or guessing which topics matter most, candidates can follow a more organized preparation path. The course helps students focus on common stationary refrigeration contractor exam topics, practice reference navigation, review electrical and mechanical code areas, strengthen HVACR trade understanding, and build confidence using the NEC, International Mechanical Code, and Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning together.

This package is especially useful for students who want access to the listed references without purchasing the books outright. The rental format includes a refundable book deposit, and the course access provides a focused study window for exam preparation. Candidates should use the rental period to become familiar with the books, practice open-book lookup skills, review missed questions, and develop a steady study routine.

What You Get

  • Rental Book: NFPA 70: National Electrical Code, 2014 Edition.
  • Rental Book: International Mechanical Code, 2015.
  • Rental Book: Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning, 22nd edition.
  • Course Access: 6 months of course access.
  • Package Price: $940.
  • Refundable Book Deposit: $400.
  • Total Due Today: $1340.

Please allow up to 15 business days for book & course rental package orders.

Exam Details

The New Orleans Louisiana First Class Stationary Refrigeration Contractor exam is associated with the ICC 635-LA exam path. Exam preparation commonly focuses on refrigeration systems, mechanical code interpretation, electrical code awareness, HVACR equipment, controls, refrigeration cycle fundamentals, equipment installation, ventilation, exhaust, combustion air, access, clearances, safe service practices, and practical field judgment. Candidates should be prepared to identify the topic being tested, locate the applicable reference material, read the requirement carefully, and apply it to the exact condition described in the question.

Common exam-prep focus areas include:

  • Refrigeration cycle fundamentals
  • Compressors, condensers, evaporators, and metering devices
  • Refrigerants, charging, recovery, and service concepts
  • System pressures, temperatures, and operating conditions
  • Electrical circuits, controls, motors, and equipment wiring concepts
  • NEC organization and electrical code navigation
  • Mechanical code organization and terminology
  • HVACR equipment installation requirements
  • Ventilation and exhaust systems
  • Duct systems and related mechanical requirements
  • Combustion air requirements when applicable
  • Chimneys, vents, equipment access, and installation clearances
  • Code tables, notes, definitions, exceptions, and practical installation conditions
  • Safe installation, service, troubleshooting, and code-compliant decision-making

Stationary refrigeration contractor questions often include details that affect the answer. A question may change based on equipment type, system condition, electrical circuit requirement, overcurrent protection, wiring method, equipment location, access requirement, clearance, refrigeration component, control function, service condition, or exception in the reference material. Other questions may focus on refrigeration theory, component operation, safe servicing, mechanical code provisions, or practical troubleshooting. Because of this, candidates should avoid relying only on memory and should practice using the references directly.

A strong preparation plan should include electrical code review, mechanical code review, and technical refrigeration review. The National Electrical Code helps candidates prepare for electrical requirements tied to equipment and circuits. The International Mechanical Code helps candidates prepare for mechanical installation conditions and system requirements. Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning helps candidates review refrigeration theory, system operation, components, controls, and service concepts.

The course portion of this rental package helps candidates create a more consistent study rhythm. Strong preparation usually comes from repeated practice, not from one long reading session. Students should use course access to review topics in sections, practice with all three books, revisit weaker areas, and build a dependable exam-prep process.

Open Book Test

The New Orleans Louisiana First Class Stationary Refrigeration Contractor (ICC - 635-LA) exam is commonly prepared for as an open book, reference-based exam. Open-book testing allows references to support your answers, but it still requires preparation, speed, accuracy, and book familiarity. Candidates who do not practice with the National Electrical Code, International Mechanical Code, and Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning may lose valuable time searching for articles, chapters, sections, definitions, tables, diagrams, explanations, notes, or exceptions.

An open-book refrigeration contractor exam rewards candidates who know how to move through all three references efficiently. The goal is not to read large portions of the books during the exam. The goal is to identify the topic, choose the correct reference, locate the applicable material, read carefully, and apply the information to the specific condition in the question.

A practical open-book workflow includes:

  • Identify the topic quickly: Decide whether the question is about electrical code, mechanical code, refrigeration theory, equipment installation, controls, service, troubleshooting, or safety.
  • Select the right reference: Use the NEC for electrical requirements, the International Mechanical Code for mechanical code requirements, and Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning for refrigeration trade knowledge.
  • Use the table of contents and index: Practice locating articles, chapters, sections, definitions, diagrams, tables, and technical explanations quickly.
  • Read carefully: The correct answer may depend on a definition, table note, installation condition, exception, equipment type, or practical system condition.
  • Practice under timed conditions: Build lookup speed gradually while still reading the reference language accurately.
  • Review missed questions: Identify whether the issue was reference navigation, concept knowledge, reading detail, calculation accuracy, or time management.

Students using this books and courses rental package should practice with the rental references throughout the course access period. The more familiar candidates become with NEC organization, mechanical code layout, refrigeration terminology, tables, definitions, and technical sections, the more efficient their study process becomes. Open-book preparation depends on knowing where to look, reading accurately, and applying the correct reference material to the exact situation.

Licensing Steps

Licensing, exam acceptance, and credential requirements can vary by jurisdiction, so New Orleans Louisiana candidates should follow the requirements set by the appropriate licensing authority. A practical path for First Class Stationary Refrigeration Contractor candidates commonly includes the following steps:

  1. Review local licensing requirements and confirm that the ICC 635-LA exam matches the stationary refrigeration contractor license or credential path being pursued.
  2. Confirm eligibility based on required experience, training, documentation, or application rules.
  3. Gather application materials such as work history records, identification, fees, and supporting documents.
  4. Prepare for the exam using structured online course access and the rental references included in this package.
  5. Practice open-book reference navigation with the NFPA 70: National Electrical Code, 2014 Edition, the International Mechanical Code, 2015, and Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning, 22nd edition.
  6. Review electrical code provisions for equipment, wiring, grounding, bonding, overcurrent protection, motors, controllers, disconnects, and safe electrical installation.
  7. Review mechanical code provisions for HVACR equipment, ventilation, exhaust, duct systems, access, clearances, combustion air, and installation requirements.
  8. Review refrigeration fundamentals so system operation, components, controls, pressures, temperatures, and service concepts become more familiar.
  9. Schedule and take the exam through the approved testing process.
  10. Submit exam results and complete any remaining licensing steps required by the jurisdiction.
  11. Maintain the license by following renewal and continuing education requirements when applicable.

This package supports the exam-preparation portion of the licensing process. Candidates should use the rental books and course access consistently so they can improve electrical code familiarity, mechanical code familiarity, HVACR system understanding, reference speed, and open-book exam skills before test day.

State Requirements

Stationary refrigeration contractor licensing requirements in Louisiana can involve state or local rules depending on license type, scope of work, project type, and where the candidate plans to operate. For New Orleans First Class Stationary Refrigeration Contractor candidates, the most important step is confirming the correct exam, application process, eligibility requirements, and documentation expectations tied to the authority handling the licensing or credentialing process.

From an exam-prep standpoint, stationary refrigeration contractor candidates should focus on developing strong competency in the following areas:

  • Electrical code application: Locating, interpreting, and applying NEC requirements related to equipment, wiring, grounding, bonding, overcurrent protection, motors, controllers, disconnects, and safe electrical installation.
  • Mechanical code application: Locating, interpreting, and applying International Mechanical Code requirements related to HVACR equipment, ventilation, exhaust, access, clearances, and mechanical installation.
  • Refrigeration system knowledge: Understanding refrigeration cycles, components, pressures, temperatures, controls, service practices, and troubleshooting concepts.
  • Installation judgment: Recognizing code-compliant approaches to refrigeration equipment, electrical circuits, mechanical systems, access, and safety.
  • Reference navigation: Finding information quickly and accurately during timed study practice.
  • Trade terminology: Understanding refrigeration, mechanical, electrical, controls, and service-related terms.
  • Study consistency: Using the rental books and course access regularly during the preparation period.

Stationary refrigeration contractor testing rewards organized preparation. Candidates should study the National Electrical Code with attention to electrical equipment and circuit requirements, study the International Mechanical Code with attention to mechanical installation conditions, and use Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning to reinforce system operation, components, controls, service procedures, and troubleshooting concepts. The online course access included with this package helps students stay focused while building reference familiarity, trade knowledge, and exam-readiness habits.

Reference Books

This New Orleans Louisiana New Orleans First Class Stationary Refrigeration Contractor (ICC - 635-LA) Books & Courses Rental Package includes the following rental references:

  • Included Rental Book: NFPA 70: National Electrical Code, 2014 Edition
    The primary electrical code reference for installation requirements, including wiring methods, grounding and bonding, overcurrent protection, equipment, circuits, conductors, motors, controllers, disconnects, and safe electrical installation practices.
  • Included Rental Book: International Mechanical Code, 2015
    The primary mechanical code reference for HVACR systems, equipment installation, ventilation, exhaust, duct systems, combustion air, chimneys, vents, access, clearance, and mechanical installation requirements.
  • Included Rental Book: Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning, 22nd edition
    A refrigeration and air conditioning trade reference used to study refrigeration system operation, refrigeration principles, components, controls, service concepts, troubleshooting fundamentals, and practical HVACR knowledge.

How these references work together: The National Electrical Code supports electrical code interpretation, the International Mechanical Code supports mechanical installation requirements, and Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning supports HVACR system knowledge and practical trade concepts. When a question asks for an electrical code requirement, work from the NEC. When a question asks for a mechanical code requirement, work from the IMC. When a question involves refrigeration theory, system operation, components, controls, service, or troubleshooting, Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning can help students stay focused.

Test Information and Study Materials

This books and courses rental package is designed for candidates who want structured study support for the New Orleans Louisiana First Class Stationary Refrigeration Contractor exam path. The preparation should be completed with the NFPA 70: National Electrical Code, 2014 Edition, the International Mechanical Code, 2015, and Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning, 22nd edition so candidates can build real familiarity with the rental references used during study.

1) Build your electrical code map.
Start by learning the structure of the National Electrical Code. Become familiar with the table of contents, article layout, definitions, index, tables, notes, and exceptions. Refrigeration equipment often involves electrical power, motors, controllers, disconnects, conductors, grounding, bonding, and overcurrent protection, so electrical code navigation is an important part of preparation.

2) Build your mechanical code map.
Use the International Mechanical Code to review mechanical installation requirements, ventilation, exhaust, ducts, equipment access, clearances, combustion air when applicable, chimneys, vents, and general mechanical provisions. Practice identifying which mechanical chapter or section applies to the field condition being described.

3) Study refrigeration fundamentals.
Use Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning to review the refrigeration cycle, heat transfer, compressors, condensers, evaporators, metering devices, refrigerants, controls, pressure-temperature relationships, system operation, and service concepts. A strong understanding of refrigeration fundamentals makes it easier to answer technical questions and interpret practical system conditions.

4) Practice topic recognition.
Before opening a reference, identify the type of question being asked. Is it about electrical code, mechanical code, refrigeration theory, equipment installation, motors, controls, service practice, or troubleshooting? Topic recognition helps prevent random searching and keeps study efficient.

5) Use the table of contents and index consistently.
All three references become more useful when candidates know how to search them. Practice using article titles, chapter titles, topic headings, indexes, definitions, diagrams, and tables. When a question includes a keyword, equipment type, system condition, or code term, practice turning that clue into a reference lookup path.

6) Pay attention to definitions, tables, notes, and exceptions.
Electrical and mechanical code questions may depend on a definition, table note, equipment condition, installation location, or exception. Technical refrigeration questions may depend on the exact function of a component or the system condition described. Train yourself to slow down enough to confirm the requirement or explanation before selecting an answer.

7) Connect system operation to field conditions.
Refrigeration questions may describe symptoms, components, pressures, temperatures, control issues, or equipment behavior. Practice connecting the described condition to the correct system concept, component function, control sequence, or service principle.

8) Practice with all three rental references together.
Use the NEC for electrical requirements, the IMC for mechanical requirements, and Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning for refrigeration trade knowledge. Switching between references is a skill. The more candidates practice with all three books, the more natural the process becomes during timed study sessions.

9) Use the online course consistently.
The package includes 6 months of course access, which gives students a defined study window. A steady schedule can help candidates review topics in manageable sections, revisit weaker areas, and continue practicing reference navigation throughout the preparation period.

10) Review missed questions by cause.
After practice sessions, do more than mark answers right or wrong. Identify why the mistake happened:

  • Reference error: The wrong book was used.
  • Navigation issue: The right book was used, but not the correct article, chapter, section, table, diagram, or topic.
  • Terminology gap: An electrical, mechanical, refrigeration, control, or service term was misunderstood.
  • Code interpretation issue: The reference language was found but applied incorrectly.
  • Trade concept issue: The refrigeration, component, operating, control, or troubleshooting principle was missed.
  • Time management issue: Too much time was spent searching before selecting an answer.

11) Connect exam prep to practical refrigeration judgment.
Stationary refrigeration contractor questions often describe practical field conditions. Candidates should practice connecting the wording of a question to real refrigeration equipment, electrical circuits, mechanical systems, controls, service concerns, and installation requirements while still answering according to the reference material. This helps students avoid relying only on habit or memory when the reference language controls the answer.

How 1 Exam Prep Helps You Reach Your Goal

1 Exam Prep supports New Orleans Louisiana First Class Stationary Refrigeration Contractor candidates with organized study guidance, trade-focused review, practice-oriented preparation, reference familiarity, and confidence-building study structure. This books and courses rental package helps students build a focused preparation routine around the ICC 635-LA exam path and the references connected to that preparation.

  • Rental reference support: Candidates receive the listed rental books needed to study with the National Electrical Code, International Mechanical Code, and Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning.
  • 6 months of course access: Students receive a defined online study period to support steady exam preparation.
  • Trade-focused review: The preparation supports real HVACR topics such as refrigeration cycles, equipment installation, electrical circuits, controls, mechanical code application, ventilation, service, and troubleshooting.
  • Reference-navigation practice: Working directly with the rental references helps candidates become more comfortable finding information quickly.
  • Practice-oriented preparation: Candidates can build lookup speed, topic recognition, code confidence, trade understanding, and better pacing through repeated review.

With consistent study, practical reference-navigation practice, and focused review of the National Electrical Code, International Mechanical Code, and Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning, candidates can approach the New Orleans Louisiana First Class Stationary Refrigeration Contractor exam with stronger preparation and a better understanding of the materials connected to electrical code application, mechanical code application, HVACR system knowledge, and stationary refrigeration contractor exam readiness.

FAQ Section

Which exam is this books and courses rental package for?

This books and courses rental package is for candidates preparing for the New Orleans Louisiana First Class Stationary Refrigeration Contractor (ICC - 635-LA) exam path.

What is included in this rental package?

This package includes rental access to the NFPA 70: National Electrical Code, 2014 Edition, the International Mechanical Code, 2015, and Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning, 22nd edition, along with 6 months of course access.

How much is the package price?

The package price is $940.

Is there a refundable book deposit?

Yes. The refundable book deposit is $400.

What is the total due today?

The total due today is $1340.

How long is the course access period?

This package includes 6 months of course access.

How long should I allow for this book and course rental package order?

Please allow up to 15 business days for book & course rental package orders.

Is the ICC 635-LA First Class Stationary Refrigeration Contractor exam open book?

Yes. This exam is commonly prepared for as an open-book, reference-based exam, which makes reference navigation, book familiarity, and timed lookup practice important parts of preparation.

Why are the NEC, International Mechanical Code, and Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning included?

The NEC supports electrical code study, the International Mechanical Code supports mechanical code study, and Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning supports refrigeration theory, system operation, service concepts, and troubleshooting review.

Does this package guarantee that I will pass the exam?

No. This package is designed to support preparation, reference familiarity, and organized study, but exam results depend on each candidate’s knowledge, study time, preparation, and performance on test day.