Pick 3 Turbo Pl
Member
Hi
Part of developing a consistently winning strategy is to look for conditions that are ripe for play within as few a number of draws as possible. A good example of this is with Ohio Mid Day.:
http://i132.photobucket.com/albums/q16/p3plyr/ohd.jpg
Here we see the number 7 plunging on the 60 draw chart. In fact, OHD K7 is the highest consecutively non-playing number of every three number game in north america as of this posting, with 37 consecutive draws of non-play. In the last two years no key number has gone past 40 consecutive draws of non-play, so this is an area to potentially exploit for profit.
To play a key number, to cover all contingencies, it takes 55 combinations. However, one can decide to play only a singles side of the bet, and filter out a root or two to cut down on the size of the bet in case the 7 does not play.
Another technique is to simply cover for all contingencies and play the K7 consecutively until it hits, increasing the size of your tickets per play as needed to cover losses along the way. This is called creating an option on a key number. It is not a cheap method, but it has a very high degree of profitability.
The important aspect is timing. It is never a matter of if but when. If we can get within just a few draws of any aspect of play, and have the bank to create the options, winning is easy, assuming we have the right dataset to work with.
There is still no published 'exact science' on p3 timing regarding particular statistical contingencies, but we can at least get in the ball park.
The current extreme for K7 OHD, in purely statistical terms, is clearly tantalizing, but there are no guarantees OHD cannot break precedent with a core statistical extreme. That is where the risk comes in.
Part of studying data is to look for areas where particular sectors of the data set translate into things that are very likely to happen very soon, or that very draw. It'll be interesting to see what happens with K7 in OHD over the next few draws.
Part of developing a consistently winning strategy is to look for conditions that are ripe for play within as few a number of draws as possible. A good example of this is with Ohio Mid Day.:
http://i132.photobucket.com/albums/q16/p3plyr/ohd.jpg
Here we see the number 7 plunging on the 60 draw chart. In fact, OHD K7 is the highest consecutively non-playing number of every three number game in north america as of this posting, with 37 consecutive draws of non-play. In the last two years no key number has gone past 40 consecutive draws of non-play, so this is an area to potentially exploit for profit.
To play a key number, to cover all contingencies, it takes 55 combinations. However, one can decide to play only a singles side of the bet, and filter out a root or two to cut down on the size of the bet in case the 7 does not play.
Another technique is to simply cover for all contingencies and play the K7 consecutively until it hits, increasing the size of your tickets per play as needed to cover losses along the way. This is called creating an option on a key number. It is not a cheap method, but it has a very high degree of profitability.
The important aspect is timing. It is never a matter of if but when. If we can get within just a few draws of any aspect of play, and have the bank to create the options, winning is easy, assuming we have the right dataset to work with.
There is still no published 'exact science' on p3 timing regarding particular statistical contingencies, but we can at least get in the ball park.
The current extreme for K7 OHD, in purely statistical terms, is clearly tantalizing, but there are no guarantees OHD cannot break precedent with a core statistical extreme. That is where the risk comes in.
Part of studying data is to look for areas where particular sectors of the data set translate into things that are very likely to happen very soon, or that very draw. It'll be interesting to see what happens with K7 in OHD over the next few draws.