Exam-focused answers on A+ Core 1 hardware, networking, printers, mobile devices, PBQs, troubleshooting logic, and study strategy.
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A+ Core 1 questions are usually easiest when you read them as field-service decisions: what is the least disruptive next check, which component best fits the symptom, and which standard matters in this environment.
What does Core 1 (220-1201) actually cover?
Core 1 emphasizes endpoint hardware, mobile devices, networking fundamentals, virtualization & client cloud, and troubleshooting. Expect practical knowledge of components, connectors, ports, Wi-Fi standards/security, storage (SATA/NVMe), RAID basics, printer workflows (laser), and methodical problem-solving.
You must pass both to earn CompTIA A+. Order doesn’t matter.
Do PBQs appear on Core 1?
Yes. On the current 220-1201 exam, CompTIA includes performance-based questions (PBQs) alongside standard question types. Expect drag-and-drop wiring, port matching, printer flows, or simple triage tasks. If a PBQ is slow, skip and return. Don’t let one item burn your clock.
How many questions and how long is the exam?
CompTIA lists the current A+ Core 1 220-1201 exam at a maximum of 90 questions, a 90-minute testing window, and a 675 passing score on the 100-900 scale. Expect a mix of single-answer, multiple-response, drag-and-drop, and performance-based questions. Budget time for check-in and keep a 5–10 minute buffer to review flagged items.
Which hardware topics should I master first?
Core components: motherboard form factors, CPU sockets, RAM types (DDR generations), PSU wattage/rails, cooling/airflow.
Storage: HDD vs SSD, SATA vs NVMe (M.2 PCIe), form factor vs interface vs protocol.
Peripherals: USB generations and connectors (A/C), display standards (HDMI/DP/DVI/VGA), Thunderbolt 3/4.
BIOS/UEFI basics: boot order, secure boot, firmware updates—when and why.
What storage and RAID knowledge is most testable?
RAID 0/1/5/10 concepts (performance vs redundancy; disk counts; one-disk fault tolerance for RAID 5).
SMART monitoring and symptoms of failing drives.
File systems: NTFS vs exFAT vs FAT32 (use cases).
Ports & protocols—what do I really need to memorize?
Know the common set cold: HTTP/HTTPS (80/443), SSH (22), FTP/FTPS/SFTP (21/990/22), SMTP/Submission (25/587), POP3/IMAP (+TLS 995/993), RDP (3389), DNS (53), DHCP (67/68), SNMP (161/162), LDAP/LDAPS (389/636). Practice with flashcards until instant.
Ethernet cabling—how deep does it go?
Standards: 100BASE-TX, 1000BASE-T, 10GBASE-T and their Cat requirements/distances.
Cables/connectors: Straight-through vs crossover (legacy), crimping pinouts (awareness), PoE basics.
Fiber:MMF vs SMF (range), LC/SC connectors, handling/cleaning best practices.
How much do I need to know about BIOS/UEFI settings?
Basics only: boot order, Secure Boot, enabling/disabling devices, XMP/DOCP memory profiles (awareness), and firmware updates when necessary for stability or compatibility (perform with caution).
What are the best ways to memorize ports/cables/Wi-Fi?
Daily micro-drills (10–15 flashcards).
Group by theme (web/mail/remote/infra).
Compare/contrast tables (Cat6 vs 6a; 802.11ac vs 802.11ax).
Teach aloud—if you can explain it clearly, you’ve learned it.
Any guidance on time management and PBQs?
First pass fast (~60–70 seconds per MC item).
Skip and flag PBQs if they’re time sinks; finish MC, then return.
Keep a 5–10 minute buffer for flagged items and PBQs at the end.
How long should I study—and how should I structure it?
From some experience: 3–4 weeks. From near-zero: 5–6 weeks with labs.
Suggested cadence:
Week 3: Printers + mobile + virtualization; first PBQ practice.
Week 4: Two full mocks; convert misses into 2-bullet rules and re-drill.
What are “2-bullet rules,” and why use them?
They’re short, sticky heuristics made from your misses:
APIPA → DHCP path before cables.
Ghosting → fuser/drum; streaks → drum/toner.
5/6 GHz for throughput; disable WPS.
Use them right before practice sets and on exam day for quick recall.
Should I memorize exact throughput numbers (Wi-Fi/Ethernet)?
Know orders of magnitude (e.g., 1 Gbps for 1000BASE-T; 10 Gbps for 10GBASE-T) and relative differences (ac vs ax, Cat6 vs 6a). Perfect PHY maxima matter less than picking the right standard/security for the scenario.
What do I do when a symptom has multiple plausible causes?
Apply the six-step method and pick the least intrusive reversible step that best tests your theory. For example, name resolution fails: check DNS settings before replacing cables.
Any final exam-day tips?
Sleep, hydrate, and arrive early.
Read the stem’s final question if the preface is long—aim your reading.
Eliminate answers that violate safety, least-privilege/least-intrusion, or basic networking logic.
Keep calm; use your 2-bullet rules and revisit flagged items with fresh eyes.
Quick readiness checklist
I can match ports ↔ protocols instantly.
I can choose the correct cable/connector (Cat6 vs 6a, LC vs SC, HDMI vs DP).
I know 802.11 generations and WPA2/WPA3 setup basics.
I can recite the laser printing process and map symptoms → components.
I can explain RAID 0/1/5/10 in one sentence each.
I can run ipconfig/ping/tracert/nslookup and interpret outputs.
I follow a six-step troubleshooting method and pick the least intrusive next step.