LNER
Group Bourdon Test
Find every group of four. Miss nothing. — here is everything you need to know about the Group Bourdon Test before your LNER OPC assessment.
Why the Group Bourdon matters for LNER drivers
LNER operates services across London King's Cross to Edinburgh, Leeds, York, Newcastle & beyond. LNER (London North Eastern Railway) operates high-speed services on the East Coast Main Line, one of the most iconic rail routes in Britain. Driving an Azuma at speeds up to 125mph demands the highest levels of attention — and the OPC psychometric test battery is designed to find candidates capable of exactly that — and the Group Bourdon Test is one of the key assessments that determines whether you will be shortlisted for the role.
Long intercity journeys demand error-free rule application across hours of operation. A driver on a three-hour cross-country run must apply the same procedural standards at hour three as at minute one. The Group Bourdon test directly measures this — whether your accuracy remains constant or degrades as concentration fatigue builds through the later rows of the sheet.
The Group Bourdon Test forms part of the OPC (Occupational Personality and Cognitive) battery used across all UK train operating companies, governed by RSSB standard RIS-3751-TOM. The format is identical at LNER as at any other operator — but the stakes are specific to this application.
How the Group Bourdon works
Test format & scoring
Group Bourdon Test
Part of the LNER OPC battery
A printed sheet of rows of dot groups (3, 4, or 5 dots each). Work systematically through every row and mark every group containing exactly four dots. Timed. Accuracy and coverage both contribute to your score.
What it measures: Sustained concentration and systematic accuracy — the ability to apply a simple rule repeatedly and correctly over a prolonged period without error rates increasing. One of the most direct measures of concentration stamina.
How to prepare
Preparation tips for LNER candidates
Work left to right, never skip ahead
Irregular scanning is the primary source of omissions. Maintain a strict left-to-right rhythm across every row.
Mark and move — do not go back
Revisiting completed rows loses time and introduces doubt. Trust your first call.
Practise on paper, not on screen
The real test is pen and paper. Print practice sheets and sit them at a desk — the physical experience matters.
Track your error distribution
Errors in later rows indicate fatigue. Errors spread throughout indicate miscounting. Each pattern has a different fix.
LNER-specific tip
Practise sessions where you maintain the same pace in the final rows as the first — intercity endurance is what the test is measuring.
FAQ
Group Bourdon Test — common questions
Is the Group Bourdon done on paper or computer?
The traditional OPC version is a printed paper-and-pencil test administered in a group setting. Our practice generates a printable PDF sheet with a separate answer key.
How long does the Group Bourdon take?
The standard administration is typically 12–15 minutes. Speed and accuracy both contribute — a slow but highly accurate run scores better than a fast run with many errors.
What are the most common errors on the Group Bourdon?
Miscounting (marking a 3-dot or 5-dot group as four dots) and omission (skipping a genuine four-dot group). Both increase in the later rows as concentration fatigues.
Does the Group Bourdon appear at all UK operators?
It is part of the standardised OPC battery under RSSB RIS-3751-TOM and appears at most UK train operating companies, typically administered on paper before the computer-based tests.
Do LNER recruit trainee train drivers or experienced drivers only?
LNER recruits both. Trainee train driver (TTD) vacancies require no prior driving experience and include a full training programme. Experienced driver vacancies require existing traction qualifications. Both routes include the OPC assessment.
Ready to practise?
All LNER OPC tests in one place — one payment, unlimited attempts.