Here’s the easy part: Your advantage as the spotter is equal to the house edge, assuming you are flat betting and playing BS for every hand. If you are not playing (just backcounting and calling him in) then your advantage is 0%.rogue1 said:Question: If I'm playing with just one partner and I call him in when the count is favorable what is our advantage over the house? Six deck game 1-10 spread.
If the spotter leaves the table after the BP comes in, how does the BP know when to leave the table, what the count is, etc?RJT said:I think it's always a good idea to keep your exposuer short!
As to the spotter having to deal with simply the house advantage, that's not completely true Sonny.
If you are going to play with a spotter as you suggest, i would assume that that spotter is going to walk away from the table once he's passed the count to the BP to find another good TC for the BP to play. This being the case, it is like inverse wonging - the spotter will only play in neutral and negative situation. This means that he will have to contend with more than the usual house advantage.
Even if the spotter was to sit at the table and play through - in my opinion a fruitless exercise as you are just going to be pulling extra money cards away from the BP - the spotter will still be at a greater disadvantage than usual as there will be an extra player every time the deck is advantageous.
Of course this disadvantage should still be irrelevant compared to the big players advantage so i guess i'm just nit picking lol.
Another thought that occurs is that the rogue1 was suggesting counting as normal and calling in another player when the deck gets advantageous - this would be no different than spreading to 2 hands when you have a good count and should only really be done in certain situation.
RJT.
I think I was getting terminology confused. It is the Gorilla BP that just plays and relies solely on signals for information, correct?jetace said:The BP is usually responsible for keeping the count once he is at the table and the spotter has indicated the TC for him.
That is correct, a gorilla has a monkey brain. He just needs to look and act the part.ScottH said:I think I was getting terminology confused. It is the Gorilla BP that just plays and relies solely on signals for information, correct?
Because it is less profitable. You have a counter who is capable of playing a BP role but he is stuck calling plays for another player. Basically his skill is being wasted. It would be more profitable to have him playing at a different table instead of wasting his skill betting the minimum through every high count. You are also limiting yourself by having a GBP that relies on other teammates for his signals.Quper said:...why does sutch thing as a normal BP exist if it's so mutch easier to get away with having a guy that doesn't need to count while he is playing big?
I say.....(drum roll).... 2%.rogue1 said:As a card counter let's say I have a 2% advantage,sometimes less.
Question: If I'm playing with just one partner and I call him in when the count is favorable what is our advantage over the house? Six deck game 1-10 spread.
thanks.
Ok, that sounds reasonable. How big of a difference is it by a gorilla to be busted and a normal BP?Sonny said:Because it is less profitable. You have a counter who is capable of playing a BP role but he is stuck calling plays for another player. Basically his skill is being wasted. It would be more profitable to have him playing at a different table instead of wasting his skill betting the minimum through every high count. You are also limiting yourself by having a GBP that relies on other teammates for his signals.
-Sonny-
If a gorilla gets busted it's not that bad. You can always train a new one to learn a few signals. Losing a real BP is much worse because they are hard to find and sometimes take 6-12 months to train. A real BP is much more valuable and much more profitable.Quper said:How big of a difference is it by a gorilla to be busted and a normal BP?