How Many Days Between Subject 1 and Subject 2?
1 Answers
According to the 'Regulations on the Application and Use of Motor Vehicle Driving Licenses,' the time between Subject 1 and Subject 2 varies depending on the type of license. For a C-class license, it is 10 days after passing the exam, while for A and B-class licenses, it is 20 days before you can schedule the test. This provides ample time to prepare for Subject 2. Each Subject 2 test appointment comes with two exam attempts. If the first attempt is unsuccessful, you can take a free retest. If you do not take the retest or fail it again, the exam session ends. Within the validity period of the driving permit, the number of Subject 2 test appointments must not exceed five. If the fifth attempt is still unsuccessful, the results of other previously passed subjects will be invalidated. To continue learning, you must reschedule the exam starting from Subject 1. For example, the C1 Subject 2 exam includes: driving a motor vehicle within a designated area to complete test items, demonstrating mastery of driving skills, and assessing the ability to judge the vehicle's spatial position. Subject 2, also known as the 'small road test,' consists of five mandatory items: reverse parking, parallel parking, hill start, right-angle turn, and curve driving. Some regions include a sixth item: high-speed toll card collection. Subject 2 Exam Tips: After getting in the car, adjust the seat and mirrors to a suitable position and ensure the seatbelt is fastened. For parallel parking, find the correct angle quickly, steer promptly, and coordinate with the vehicle's speed. During hill starts, remember to engage the handbrake, signal left, release the handbrake, and control the clutch while gently accelerating to avoid stalling or rolling back. For right-angle turns, react swiftly once the reference point is identified, matching the vehicle's speed to prevent misalignment. For curve driving (S-turns), reduce speed and proceed cautiously. Those with good vehicle control may pass smoothly in one go. During reverse parking, maintain controlled speed, identify reference points accurately, and make minor adjustments if deviations are observed in the mirrors. The driving test consists of three subjects: Subject 1 (traffic laws and regulations), Subject 2 (field driving skills), and Subject 3 (road driving skills and safety knowledge). The safety knowledge test is conducted after Subject 3 and is commonly referred to as Subject 4, though this term is not officially recognized in regulations (e.g., the Ministry of Public Security’s Order No. 123).