
RRB JE CBT 2 2026 is the final stage that determines the candidateβs rank and selection in the Railway Junior Engineer recruitment process. The exam contains 150 questions from technical and non-technical sections such as General Awareness, Physics & Chemistry, Computer Basics, Environment, and branch-specific technical subjects.
The previous year analysis shows that Production Engineering, Material Science, and Industrial Engineering carry the highest weightage. To succeed, candidates should focus on PYQs, daily question practice, mock tests, and regular revision while maintaining strong accuracy and conceptual clarity.
RRB JE CBT 2 is the most important stage of the Railway Junior Engineer recruitment process because the final merit list is prepared based on this exam. Candidates who qualify CBT 1 must focus seriously on CBT 2 preparation.
The recruitment process generally includes:
CBT 1 β Screening Stage (Qualifying)
CBT 2 β Merit Deciding Stage
Document Verification
Medical Examination
Marks obtained in CBT 2 directly determine your rank and selection, so a clear strategy and understanding of the exam pattern is essential.
The CBT 2 exam consists of 150 questions for 150 marks. The questions are divided into technical and non-technical sections.
|
Section |
Questions |
Marks |
|
General Awareness |
15 |
15 |
|
Physics & Chemistry |
15 |
15 |
|
Basic Computer Applications |
10 |
10 |
|
Environment & Pollution |
10 |
10 |
|
Technical Ability (Branch Specific) |
100 |
100 |
|
Total |
150 |
150 |
Each question carries 1 mark.
The exam is objective type (MCQ).
Technical questions depend on the candidateβs engineering branch such as Mechanical, Electrical, Civil, etc.
Around 80β90% questions are theoretical, while only 10β20% are numerical.
The syllabus of CBT 2 includes both common subjects and branch-specific technical topics.
Important topics include:
Current Affairs
Indian Economy
Indian Polity
History and Geography
Science and Technology
Railway related updates
Questions are generally asked from Class 11 and 12 level concepts, such as:
Laws of Motion
Heat and Thermodynamics
Electricity and Magnetism
Basic Chemical Reactions
Atomic Structure
Topics usually include:
Computer Fundamentals
Operating System basics
MS Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint)
Internet and Networking
Computer security
Environmental basics
Pollution types
Environmental protection methods
Climate change and sustainability
For Mechanical Engineering candidates, the syllabus is divided into several core subjects, such as:
Engineering Mechanics
Strength of Materials
Machine Design
Fluid Mechanics
Thermal Engineering
Production Engineering
Industrial Engineering
Material Science
Metrology
Welding and Machining Processes
These subjects together form the 100 technical questions section.
Analyzing previous year papers helps understand important topics and exam trends.
|
Subject |
Approx Questions |
|
Engineering Mechanics |
11 |
|
Strength of Materials |
10 |
|
Fluid Mechanics |
11 |
|
Engineering Materials |
9 |
|
Industrial Engineering |
10 |
|
Production Engineering |
37β39 |
|
Thermal Engineering |
Very few |
|
Hydraulic Machinery |
0 |
The analysis shows that Production Engineering had the highest weightage.
The latest exam analysis reveals some important trends.
Important topics included:
Force and Motion
Centroid and Centre of Gravity
Moment of Inertia
About 8β9 questions were asked from this section.
Key areas were:
Stress and Strain
Shear Force and Bending Moment
Torsion
Pressure Vessels
Around 8 questions were asked.
Approximately 15 questions were asked from thermal topics such as:
Heat Transfer
Internal Combustion Engines
However:
Power Plant questions were not asked
RAC questions were very limited
Around 6β7 questions were asked from:
Fluid flow concepts
Hydraulic machines
According to recent exam analysis, around 55β60% of the technical paper comes from a few core subjects.
Production Engineering
Material Science
Industrial Engineering
These subjects alone can contribute almost 50β60% of the questions.
Fluid Mechanics
Engineering Mechanics
Strength of Materials
Thermal Engineering
Students should prioritize high-weightage subjects first, but should not skip any subject.
The cut off varies each year depending on difficulty level, number of vacancies, and competition.
|
Category |
Expected Cut Off |
|
General |
100 β 115 |
|
OBC |
90 β 105 |
|
SC |
80 β 95 |
|
ST |
70 β 85 |
Candidates should aim for 120+ marks to secure a safe rank.
A well-structured preparation strategy is essential to crack the exam.
Start by carefully analyzing:
Exam pattern
Subject weightage
Previous year questions
This will help you identify important topics and study priorities.
Previous year papers help you understand:
Question types
Difficulty level
Repeated concepts
Analyzing PYQs improves both speed and accuracy.
Daily question practice is extremely important.
A good target is:
300 questions per day during the practice phase
Solve them in one go with a timer and analyze mistakes afterward.
One powerful preparation technique is maintaining a mistake notebook.
Steps:
Write down every mistake you make during practice.
Review this notebook every night.
Ensure the same mistake is not repeated.
This method gradually improves accuracy and concept clarity.
Mock tests simulate the real exam environment.
Recommended plan:
1 full test every 2 days
Analyze the test thoroughly
Identify weak areas
Remember that analysis is as important as giving the test itself.
A daily preparation routine may include:
3 hours β Question solving
3 hours β Solution analysis
3 hours β Revision
2 hours β Mock test practice
Overall, serious aspirants should target 10β12 hours of focused study daily. Aiming for the top ranks instead of just selection increases your chances of clearing the exam comfortably.