Howdy
In the game of .25 9/6 JOB Progressive at what point in the rising jackpot
do you hold the Ace Ten suited?
Old Grumpy
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Howdy
In the game of .25 9/6 JOB Progressive at what point in the rising jackpot
do you hold the Ace Ten suited?
Old Grumpy
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Howdy
In the game of .25 9/6 JOB Progressive at what point in the rising
jackpot
do you hold the Ace Ten suited?
I recall something around $1120 (without a flush penalty). You can
figure this out for yourself using most of the software on the market
today. The game is still negative (in and of itself) at this value.
Dick
--- In vpFREE@yahoogroups.com, BANDSTAND54@A... wrote:
BANDSTAND54@A... wrote:
Howdy
In the game of .25 9/6 JOB Progressive at what point in the rising
jackpot do you hold the Ace Ten suited?
Old Grumpy
On a .25 9/6 JOB at what point in the jackpot would one hold the A
10 suited?
The Grump
The answer is considerably more involved than the earlier posts
indicated. The figures below were calculated several years ago and
were
done in coins, so the second column is merely coins/4 --- which will
be
one unit off in some cases due to rounding. The figures use my
abbreviations --- defined below the table. It was copied from an
Excel
spreadsheet, so the columns may or may not line up on your computer
screen.
4215 1054 Three lsp
4280 1070 Two lso
4370 1093 One lsp
4485 1121 No interference at all
5220 1305 Two lsp + lsfp
5285 1321 One lsp + lsfp
5305 1326 Two lsp + fp
5375 1344 One lsfp
5390 1348 One lsp + fp
5510 1378 One fp
4875 1219 Weighted average of above
lsp low straight penalty --- 2-5 unsuited with "AT"
lsfp low straight flush penalty --- 2-5 suited with "AT"
fp flush penalty --- 6-9 suited with "AT"
It presumes no J, Q, K in the hand --- the numbers are quite
a bit larger and progressives rarely get that high.
Bob Dancer
--- In vpFREE@yahoogroups.com, "jeffcole2003oct" <jeff-cole@c...>
wrote:
The answer is considerably more involved than the earlier posts
indicated. The figures below were calculated several years ago and
were
done in coins, so the second column is merely coins/4 --- which
will
be
one unit off in some cases due to rounding. The figures use my
abbreviations --- defined below the table. It was copied from an
Excel
spreadsheet, so the columns may or may not line up on your computer
screen.4215 1054 Three lsp
4280 1070 Two lso
4370 1093 One lsp
4485 1121 No interference at all
5220 1305 Two lsp + lsfp
5285 1321 One lsp + lsfp
5305 1326 Two lsp + fp
5375 1344 One lsfp
5390 1348 One lsp + fp
5510 1378 One fp4875 1219 Weighted average of above
lsp low straight penalty --- 2-5 unsuited with "AT"
lsfp low straight flush penalty --- 2-5 suited with "AT"
fp flush penalty --- 6-9 suited with "AT"It presumes no J, Q, K in the hand --- the numbers are quite
a bit larger and progressives rarely get that high.Bob Dancer
Good and complete answer. Are you Bob Dancer or Jeff Cole?
Dick