Just flunked my M1 Written Test | GTAMotorcycle.com

Just flunked my M1 Written Test

icitla

Member
Recently moved here from Quebec. I failed the "G" and "M" sections of the test. I got 10 right answers out of 14 in one case, 16 out of 24 in the other. So I bought the 2 manuals on sale at the DMV and will try again very soon.

I have a simple question: Are the questions going to be the same ones? (I took note of my wrong answers, since laws and practices differ from my native province)

Thanks in advance for the info!

P.S. Staff advised me to instead exchange my Quebec 6R learners' license (although other employees say they can't do tris) I have noticed employee answers differ greatly from one office/person to another (I was even denied the right to pass the test in Guelph because born outside Ontario and no local pieces of ID yet...)
 
If I recall, there are 12 versions of the M1 Written test. (One of the ladies at the couter where you write the test let my wife know when she passed)

Both my wife and I failed the first time. Went to the back of the line and paid the $15 and rewrote it. We both passed the 2nd time.

I HIGHLY suggest that you are VERY quiet and polite/kind to the people that hand you thge written test. They choose which to give you and there are VERY easy ones vs. the ones that are a PAIN IN THE ***!
 
Perhaps you shouldn't be riding?

those test don't mean **** really...how many people pass that still shouldn't be riding??
some people can have lots of practical experience or have language barriers...
The day I wrote my G1 I drove home having never been behind the wheel before, does that mean I shouldn't have been driving either...?
 
Enwoye va etudier la! Moi aussi jveux rider :p

Jaime ben ton nom en passant ahah

Handbook is always a good idea prior to doing it..even if its a casual read
 
No harm in failing, it is the only way we learn.

This site helped me a lot when I wanted to get my M1, they have sample tests and I did them while I waited in line, when the time came to do the test I was prepared and passed without issue.

http://www.passthewheel.com/
 
those test don't mean **** really...how many people pass that still shouldn't be riding??
some people can have lots of practical experience or have language barriers...
The day I wrote my G1 I drove home having never been behind the wheel before, does that mean I shouldn't have been driving either...?


Exactly my point, look at the LARGE # of people that pass the test that should not be on a motorcycle, if people this incompetent are able to pass, what does it say of the person that cannot pass?
 
those test don't mean **** really...how many people pass that still shouldn't be riding??
some people can have lots of practical experience or have language barriers...
The day I wrote my G1 I drove home having never been behind the wheel before, does that mean I shouldn't have been driving either...?

Exactly my point, look at the LARGE # of people that pass the test that should not be on a motorcycle, if people this incompetent are able to pass, what does it say of the person that cannot pass?

Could not have said it better REC! LR if you cant read the test then how the fack do you drive considering all our provincial signage is in English/French?
 
those test don't mean **** really...how many people pass that still shouldn't be riding...?

How many passed that don't even know how to read?

OP: you will pass, read the book and try again that's all.
 
Your competancy in one field may very well have NO bearing in your competancy in another. I may be able to point out phases of the moon, but I sure as **** can't fly a rocket to it.

The test is mearly a matter of comprehension - and if I recall my test, it was full of very similar answers to very ambiguous questions.

Exactly my point, look at the LARGE # of people that pass the test that should not be on a motorcycle, if people this incompetent are able to pass, what does it say of the person that cannot pass?
 
The ability to pass the M1 does not imply ability to ride a motorcycle. Reverse is true as well.
 
I failed my M1 first time around back in 1996. I took the test a week later and passed.

Now I have 15+ years under my belt. I guess I shouldnt be on a motorcycle or a car?
 
I failed my M1 first time around back in 1996. I took the test a week later and passed.

Now I have 15+ years under my belt. I guess I shouldnt be on a motorcycle or a car?

Perhaps. Plenty of people who are fully licensed to drive probably shouldn't be. How they have survived decades behind the wheel simply boggles the mind.
 
I failed my first time. I took it after working a 12hr night shift, so I'll chalk it up to that. But I took the next day and passed no problems.
 

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