So I decided I was going to need all of the help I could get when it comes to joining the miliary and since I saw Brain+ in the sore I figured I would give it a fighting chance. I wen in for my interview and to take a pre ASVAB qualification before MEPS and before going in I listened to Brain+ twice. I scored an 86 without it on the ASVAB that I took as a practice at home but when I got to the office I didn't even need to use a calculator and only had to write out one problem out of the 128.
After the dose was over I felt very confident tat I could pass it, what helps with this dose is the fact it won't cause you to second guess yourself and I find it to have a great mood life effect on me. Now that I scored that high I am qualified for an MOS in 25 Series for programming and servicing satellites. I have o say I am very pleased with I Doser more so now than ever since that helped me to achieve what many cannot!
Brain+ (Scored 91 ASVAB)
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- Level 4 (50-199)
- Posts: 64
- Joined: Fri May 03, 2013 12:40 am
Re: Brain+ (Scored 91 ASVAB)
If your AFQT was 91, that is not a bad score at all. MOS of programming and servicing satellites? That is something truly unusual. We're you thinking of Joining the Air Force? That would be your best opportunity. Anyways, It has been a while since I took the test. back when I took it, though, people tell me it was a bit different. Harder, some say. At the time, my understanding of mechanics was exponentially high, as well as electronics and programming. I spent most of my time designing high quality firearms, all with custom calibers for specific tasks. I even came up with a design with a unique barrel and gas-piston system that allowed the model to toggle between uses as a manual-action sniper, as well a changing to a semi automatic rifle for high-speed shot placement, engaging a gas piston that cycled the action. With the next setting, the barrel modified itself into a shorter model, and the weapon activated a different set of sears, disconnectors, and cams to allow semi, 2-burst, 3-burst, and automatic fire. The firearm also could be fitted with a dual snail drum magazine with a 300+ round capacity, and a toggle switch interchanged internal springs and other mechanisms to increase rate of fire, transforming the weapon from an assault rifle into a support heavy machine gun. Production cost? About $900,000. Weight? 68.7 lbs unloaded. Reliability? About as reliable as a butter knife to cut steel. This weapon was a great idea, but was an impractical and costly attempt at combining three military field positions into one.
Well, anyways, my AFQT score was 98, and when I contacted a navy recruiter, the MOS they gave me, I kid you not, was nuclear engineering. The Navy wanted me to maintain the Engine on the USS Nimitz. I declined, and decided to study sound engineering. That led me to effects created with similar but slightly different sound samples. That led me to binaural.beats, which led me to BWE, which recently brought me here. My life after high school in a nutshell, basically.
Well, anyways, my AFQT score was 98, and when I contacted a navy recruiter, the MOS they gave me, I kid you not, was nuclear engineering. The Navy wanted me to maintain the Engine on the USS Nimitz. I declined, and decided to study sound engineering. That led me to effects created with similar but slightly different sound samples. That led me to binaural.beats, which led me to BWE, which recently brought me here. My life after high school in a nutshell, basically.