rollem411 said:
I agree completely with what you are saying, however, I think your still missing what I am saying.
You will make more money because lets say a max bet...a 1x$100 bet that you have out won't yield you as much as 2x$75, which is the optimum bet for spreading to two hands.
i agree on a given round you will make more betting multiple hands. but you are missing what we are saying :devil:. we are saying that overall, you will get more rounds at a given advantage when you play less hands per round. here is how i think of it in my head --
lets take an example and say there are X cards remaining before the cut card in a high TC segment. Each hand (yours and dealer's) use Y cards. what is the optimal number of hands to play?
play 1 hand per round at max bet of $100: you will get X/(2Y) rounds at $100 each for a total of X/(2Y)*100 total money in action.
play 2 hands per round at $75 each: you will get X/(3Y) rounds at $150 each for a total of X/(3Y)*150 total money in action.
for the sake of this example, assume your advantage across rounds remaining does not change.
then in an ideal world, where you can use up fractions of a card (and Y is a fraction, somewhere slightly less than 2.7 in a positive TC, but let's call it 2.7), the results for the two situations above would be exactly the same. however, in the real world, you will not use 2.7 cards, you will use 3, or an extra 0.3 cards per hand than you ideally would. you will more quickly use up these slight 0.3 fractions the more hands you play, such that after just one round of playing two hands, you've already used about one extra card worth of those fractions than in the ideal world. playing one hand per round, it would take you two rounds to use up that extra card. so basically you will be able to get more rounds in playing just one hand. does that make sense? maybe this is a bad/incorrect way to look at it?
also note the results in the two cases above are exactly the same because we assume the optimal amount on 2 hands is to play 75% each. what if it's only 70% on each hand? then you see for sure that playing one hand is the optimal choice.
there is a discussion of the optimal number of hands to play in BJA3. i dont recall Don's arguments off the top of my head.