If you want to improve on the flaw questions, try work through the flaw section of the LSATtrainer... it complements 7sage very well and gives you mini flaw spotting exercises through its drills that fine tune your abilities.
Can't underscore LSATtrainer enough for flaws. Also, when you miss flaw questions, do you identify the flaw correctly but mess up at the answer choices or do you trip up mostly at the point where you need to identify the flaw in the stimulus?
Stay away from Powerscore... if you have to get anything, get the LSATtrainer... it provides a sufficiently different approach while still complementing the 7sage curriculum.
Great tip—this book is also on Amazon (http://www.amazon.com/LSAT-Trainer-Presents-How-Study-ebook/dp/B00FHBCNDE/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427994771&sr=8-1&keywords=lsat+trainer+presents) for a cool $2.99, Kindle edition.
@emli1000 STAHP plenty of Texans ain't got boots!!!
Reminds me of the "All Texans have hats ... Most people who have hats have hat racks ... Therefore some Texans have hat racks" example early in the LSATtrainer.
... I'm finishing up the LSATTrainer book by Mike Kim (I ... week in addition to the Trainer, I have been reviewing tough ... 2 months will be focused LSAT time, so I will cut ...
@"Quick Silver" love the Trainer especially for the question type breakdown for RC. The Trainer was my first love—but the RC question breakdown is something I'll return to again and again.
I'm in Sherman Oaks. I've completed the 7Sage curriculum. Just finishing up the LG Bundle and LSATtrainer over the next 10 days and planning to start PTs, coupled with a LOT of drilling. If that complements your study schedule, PM me.