This is what you should learn for single deck not those small deviations:Įdit 2: After reading the chart and talking to nickel's a bit more. Compared to the deviations we gain from counting, you will gain far more money sticking to those than whatever random one you can find.Įdit: Here is the composite SD list. They take into account a continuously shuffled deck being delt at full every time. But other than the first round you will not be making any money memorizing these deviations. If you want to learn them, sure go for it. The point im trying to make is that these should not be used past the first round. A few examples he mentioned:ġ2 v 3 - stand for 4,8 and 5,7 but you'll hit with 10,2 or 9,3. But I've been told by people far more informed than me, (nickels on BJA) that these are basically break even deviations and that composite deviations are far more useful on single deck than learning these. I assume the odd things like 3,3 v 3 not being a split but 2,2 v 3 being a split has something to do with truncating and you should for practical reasons stick to the normal deviations. Deviation at below 0.įor the rest of the Aces I honestly have no clue and I've not looked at them before. Here's an explanation for all of the deviations:ĩ v 2 double - (2,7 3,6 4,5 v 2): True count minimum of 2, max 3. The others are just true count deviations you would do regardless of what you get. This one is actually a deviation because there are only two 7's left in the deck.
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