JSTAT
Banned
At 13 cards, one ace should be seen. +3 is the break even point with one ace. +2 with 2 aces seen add +1 ,+1 with 3 aces add +2, even count with 4 aces seen add +3. At 14-25 cards, the count is rounded up to the first 13 card level.KenSmith said:Your "1/4 deck count at 1/2 deck since 3/4 deck hasn't been reached yet" comment is not comprehensible to me, but I understand that you are saying that 4 aces played with 14 cards left is treated as 2 extra aces. It looks like you are saying that whenever you are considering the number of extra aces, always round up.
JSTAT, Can you verify that this is your intention:
In the first quarter deck (1 to 12 cards seen), we expect to see no aces, so any aces seen are extra. This value can be from 0 to 4.
In the second quarter deck (13 to 25 cards seen), we expect 1 ace, so if we see more than 1, those are extra. This value can be from 0 to 3.
In the third quarter deck (26 to 38 cards seen), we expect 2 aces, so the extra aces value can be either 0, 1, or 2.
In the final quarter deck (39 or more cards seen), we expect 3 aces, so the extra aces value can be either 0 or 1.
Right?
At 26 cards, 2 aces should be seen. +2 is the break even point with the two aces seen. +1 with 3 aces seen add +1, even count with four aces seen add +2. With only one ace seen, a count of +3 is needed. At 27-38 cards, the count is rounded up to the 26 card level.
At 39 cards, 3 aces should be seen. +1 is the break even point with three aces seen. An even count with 4 aces seen, add +1. With only one ace seen, a count of +3 is needed to account for the extra two aces. With two aces seen, a count of +2 is needed to account for the extra ace. Piece of cake Ken!