Locked – complete all modules to prove readiness
These are the same bread-and-butter math skills I saw on my own EIAT—basic arithmetic, fractions, and word problems that show up over and over.
The EIAT loves motion and “rate” problems. Here I walk you through kinematics and flow logic the same way I learned it to pass my exam.
Short passages and workplace-style procedures similar to what you’ll see on the EIAT, so you can practice reading fast without missing details.
The EIAT asks you to read snapshots of a 1/16" tape measure. These drills match the exact presentation style you’ll see on the real test.
Gears, pulleys, and basic mechanical advantage—broken into simple rules I used myself so you’re not guessing which way things move.
Photos and matching drills for the common tools you’ll see on EIAT-style questions, so you recognize them instantly instead of losing points searching your memory.
Let’s treat this like your real EIAT. Before you start, set yourself up the same way you will in the union hall: no calculator, no phone, and a quiet space where you won’t be interrupted.
Grab one sheet of paper for scratch work and two pencils or pens. Once the timer begins, questions will advance in order with a strict time limit per question. There’s no going back, so answer as best you can and keep moving forward—just like the real test.
At the end, you’ll see a breakdown of how you did by section and difficulty, plus how long you spent on each question so you can see where pacing might be an issue.
Choose between a full run in Standard Timed or a block-by-block run in Section Timed to mimic the “timed sections with breaks” format some halls use.
Found something confusing, broken, or annoying? Tell me exactly where it happened and what you expected.