GENERALLY, you want to work your way from older to newer. However, that being said it is a good idea to mix in some newer ones far enough before test day so that you can begin to familiarize yourself with the subtle differences.
I've heard this from a lot of others... But just remind yourself that you know all of this. It's the same on every PT. You will notice a drop in your score but after a few you will adjust to these newer PTs and be back to your regular score or higher.
The 10 packs of actual LSATs are all over Amazon and you can usually find clean used ones for a pretty low price. I got 2 of those for about 10 bucks total and all the PTs were in the 10-35 range or so.
@nicole.hopkins I just got the cambridge bundle and it's got drills taken from tests 1-38 and I get full PT's (39-70). I will study as many have suggested. Use the earlier tests for drilling and the newer ones for full PT's. Thank You!
@emli1000 well i've already taken the 50s PTs, so i'm just wondering if i should use them for drilling purposes instead of the earlier ones, to become more "fluent" with the newer tests? i could be overthinking this :)
I've been using newer tests thats I've taken to drill. I saw my scores dip a little with the newer tests so I've been going through the LR and RC sections again. I won't have time to finish all the 50's before June so I'm using those for drilling as well.
"foggy" is a relative term. Have you drilled enough of the LR question types, LG game types? Are you done with the 7Sage curriculum? I would probably take a full PT (preferably in the PT 50's so you can save the newer ones) just to gauge your process.