... time with a full section. Practicing drills of fullsections (even full of games ... . Have you tried doing a full section of LG at least ... -1 on LG during a full, fresh PT. You can do ...
I'm primarily left with re-takes as well. I take re-takes as a fulllength test and find that They are still beneficial. There are instances where I will get the same ones wrong which will really show a weak spot.
There aren't, because JY only uses old LSATs for the problem sets, to leave all the recent ones pristine for fulllength PT practice. The comparative passages were introduced in PT 52, and the problem sets use PT 1-38ish.
You could start by doing a few of the old PTs as fulllength practice, understanding that the scores might be inflated due to familiarity with the material. That would combine the benefits of drills with getting used to sitting through a fulllength test.
What most of us do is sacrifice PTs 1-36 to use for drills and save everything above that for fulllength PTs. It's completely arbitrary, but I think that would be the most commonly used line to distinguish a test as old.
How many PTs are you guys doing before D-Day? I was thinking 3 full-length timed (76, 77 and 78) with one un-timed (75) 2 days before just to reinforce fundamentals while not stressing over timed score?