I have a chance to buy a VP machine.

shadroch

Well-Known Member
For entertainment purposes only. It's paytable is typical 10/7 JOB, but is there anyway of knowing if the chip inside is actually set to this?
 

blackchipjim

Well-Known Member
research

There is a game company locally close to where I live that sells slots and everything for casinos. It's a small company but I will call the guy to see if calling the mfg. with the serial # and which chip # will give you the info you need.
 

Machinist

Well-Known Member
Hmmmmmmmm. 10/7 JOB. ???? Double Bonus is full pay for 10/7..
If it was 10/7 JOB....that would be about 101.5%??? Give or take a smidge...
So your wondering if the chip is rigged?
I would guess a number off the chip if the chip was removable..otherwise I guess a few numbers off the machine would help to find out.
Or play it for a month???

Machinist
 

shadroch

Well-Known Member
My mistake, it's 9-6, not 10-7. Its a Williams machine thats about a dozen years old. Its cheap enough, and looks real nice so i'm thinking of getting it just to practice with. The bill acceptor is disabled and welded/superglued shut so you can't play with money. Funsies only.
 

flydog

New Member
If you want something to practice with..

i have been playing VIDEO POKER + PERFECT PLAY TRAINER on my iPhone and iPad..

https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/video-poker-perfect-play-trainer/id420985787?mt=8

Its an awesome video poker game, PLUS it trains you to play perfectly.
you can even change the pay tables to match your local casino's pay tables, and it will train you on those pay tables.

Being on the iPhone, it fits in your pocket, and doesnt need any internet connection.

cant ask for anything more!
 

aslan

Well-Known Member
shadroch said:
For entertainment purposes only. It's paytable is typical 10/7 JOB, but is there anyway of knowing if the chip inside is actually set to this?
The following is all conjecture, but might help. I have been told that the gaming commission (in Vegas) keeps an identical chip on file for every machine in Vegas. I never thought about it until now, but what earthly good would it be if they could not read it. I'm guessing there is a way to read the chip for certain critical information, and if that guess is correct, a call to a gaming commission in your area may reveal how you can go about verifying what you have.

I'm guessing again that the random number generator (maybe that is the chip's function in a VP machine) is the only variable in a VP machine, since unlike regular slot machines the odds are determined not by chip but by the pay schedule. If the random number generator is not really random, that would be the stuff of a rigged VP machine.
 
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