That's what cardcounting is. Forming a probability as to the next card based on knowledge of the composition of remaining decks. If I guess it will be a ten card off the top of the shoe I will be right 4 times in 13. If I guess it will be ten with a True Count of +3, I will be right a little better than one time in 3.newkidd said:is there a way of guesstimating what tha dealers hole card is, very well knowing tha tc ya know. ????
There are better ways of using this information that just hole carding. You will sometimes be able to read the dealers next card by looking for a damaged corner and if you are sitting at first base, you can use the damaged corners as a target for where to cut to land a 10 card in your hand. Very useful indeed.Cplcam said:When you are sitting at 1st base and if the casino is using one of those checking devices with the red / green lights to check for blackjack, if the dealer is jamming his cards into the reader when he has a ten up and check for an ace under, he can bend the tens. From 1st base you will start to see the ten value cards (when they are the dealers down card) take on an upward curl on the corner. Seeing the slight upward curl on the dealers down card comes in handy when he has an ace on top and asks for insurance, etc.
You wouldn't see it at every table but when you do, take advantage of it.
Seems to me I read about an AP who cut the cards based on that little curl from a hard to read checking device. He wom nearly a million$ befoe they figured out what he was doing. Yes, come to think of it, I read about it in AP for the Casino Executive by Bill Zender. I never thought of the application you just mentioned, however.Cplcam said:When you are sitting at 1st base and if the casino is using one of those checking devices with the red / green lights to check for blackjack, if the dealer is jamming his cards into the reader when he has a ten up and check for an ace under, he can bend the tens. From 1st base you will start to see the ten value cards (when they are the dealers down card) take on an upward curl on the corner. Seeing the slight upward curl on the dealers down card comes in handy when he has an ace on top and asks for insurance, etc.
You wouldn't see it at every table but when you do, take advantage of it.
Yes but the corners of the 10 and A cards get bent a different direction to the cards in the hole.LeonShuffle said:Except that ALL cards get checked in that device, whether they're 10s, Aces, or anything else.
So the hole card is checked and THEN placed beneath the up card?LeonShuffle said:I guess that makes sense but where I play (A.C.) and when I dealt, only the hole cards gets checked, not both cards together.