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Was there ever reality in this slot machine myth?

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September 18th, 2011 at 4:08:38 PM permalink
Bonita
Member since: Jan 5, 2010
Threads: 3
Posts: 8
There was once a time when machines where due to hit. If the machines where holding too much the machine would adjust itself to meet the required hold. I was told this from a slot manager in South Carolina. The machines in question where from the early 90s and are not found in any legit casino these days.
September 18th, 2011 at 5:20:22 PM permalink
EvenBob
Member since: Jul 18, 2010
Threads: 231
Posts: 6380
Quote: FleaStiff
They may be the lowest paying machines in town but that does not mean that lightning will not strike there.


I told ya my wife won $1200 at the airport
slots a couple years ago. Took her about an
hour to lose it when we got to the hotel.
One casino owner to another: "It would be so much easier if we could just hit them over the head, steal their money, and throw their bodies in the creek." Al Swearengen, Deadwood
October 22nd, 2011 at 1:54:53 PM permalink
statman
Member since: Sep 25, 2011
Threads: 12
Posts: 95
The old mechanical machines had "jackpot" bins and the expectation would depend on how full the bin was. If someone had just hit a jackpot the machine would be relatively unattractive unless the owner refilled it. Later models had two jackpot bins so that at least one would be full most of the time. A machine would not be "due" on the basis of past plays but only on the basis of how many coins were in the jackpot bin.
A fool is someone whose pencil wears out before its eraser does. - Marilyn Vos Savant
March 28th, 2012 at 6:27:07 PM permalink
Goldbaron357
Member since: Jun 13, 2011
Threads: 3
Posts: 16
I just gotta add my two cents, not to beat a dead horse or anything of the like...

But... The law of large numbers is the only thing that half way guarantees a jackpot is due... I mean...

1 in 40,000 hands is the odd on a royal roughly if you play properly. That being said... A machine could STILL go years without hitting a royal. I don't disute that.


However... Look at a progressive video poker machine... The nickel ones I played would increment 1 cent per 5 hands. I would figure out how many hands since last royal. See... The more hands that go by without it hitting, the worse the odds are that it can go much longer. I would simply sit and play the high progressives til I got the royals... Longest I spent was 18 hours for a $800 progressive. The shortest I spent was 3 hours for a $520 progressive. But I had never seen any of the jackpot meters hit $1,000, which with a reset at $205, that would have been what... Half a million hands to not hit a royal to get that high?

So, the longer you play, the more hands played, the more likely you are to hit it. It is a kind of paraodox I think... The RNG doesn't have any memory of last or future hands in regard to outcome, but if you look at the coin toss... If you flip a coin enough times, eventually you will have exactly 50% heads and 50% tails. The coin has no memory, but odds and probabilities have a way of balancing themselves out.
March 28th, 2012 at 7:13:57 PM permalink
teddys
Member since: Nov 14, 2009
Threads: 100
Posts: 2718
Quote: Goldbaron357

However... Look at a progressive video poker machine... The nickel ones I played would increment 1 cent per 5 hands. I would figure out how many hands since last royal. See... The more hands that go by without it hitting, the worse the odds are that it can go much longer. I would simply sit and play the high progressives til I got the royals... Longest I spent was 18 hours for a $800 progressive. The shortest I spent was 3 hours for a $520 progressive. But I had never seen any of the jackpot meters hit $1,000, which with a reset at $205, that would have been what... Half a million hands to not hit a royal to get that high?
No. The odds of hitting the royal are the same whether the jackpot is at $250 or $1000.

Quote:
So, the longer you play, the more hands played, the more likely you are to hit it. It is a kind of paraodox I think... The RNG doesn't have any memory of last or future hands in regard to outcome, but if you look at the coin toss... If you flip a coin enough times, eventually you will have exactly 50% heads and 50% tails. The coin has no memory, but odds and probabilities have a way of balancing themselves out.
Also, no. The odds are the same for the person who first sits down and the person who has been playing for 18 hours. The law of large numbers says the distributions will converge on 50/50, but it will never be exactly 50/50.
"If you can make one heap of all your winnings / And risk it on one turn of pitch-and-toss / And lose, and start again at your beginnings / And never breathe a word about your loss..." -Rudyard Kipling
March 28th, 2012 at 7:28:18 PM permalink
winmonkeyspit3
Member since: Dec 30, 2011
Threads: 11
Posts: 155
On one progressive at my casino a lot of the dealers insist it hits when it reaches the 8,000 range. It is a nickel machine but you have to play max coin ($2.25) to be eligable for the jackpot. The machines are dead when the progressive is low but when it is up high you can't find a seat. Don't know.
March 28th, 2012 at 7:31:11 PM permalink
pacomartin
Member since: Jan 14, 2010
Threads: 544
Posts: 6178
Quote: statman
The old mechanical machines had "jackpot" bins and the expectation would depend on how full the bin was. If someone had just hit a jackpot the machine would be relatively unattractive unless the owner refilled it. Later models had two jackpot bins so that at least one would be full most of the time. A machine would not be "due" on the basis of past plays but only on the basis of how many coins were in the jackpot bin.


That sounds like an urban legend.
Wine loved I deeply, dice dearly -Edgar, betrayed son of Gloucester in King Lear
March 28th, 2012 at 7:32:29 PM permalink
Nareed
Member since: Nov 11, 2009
Threads: 215
Posts: 7241
Quote: winmonkeyspit3
On one progressive at my casino a lot of the dealers insist it hits when it reaches the 8,000 range. It is a nickel machine but you have to play max coin ($2.25) to be eligable for the jackpot. The machines are dead when the progressive is low but when it is up high you can't find a seat. Don't know.


So the machines hit a royal more often when more people play them? That's what it sounds like to me. It makes perfect sense, too.
This space is closed for remodeling
March 28th, 2012 at 7:47:28 PM permalink
AlanMendelson
Member since: Oct 5, 2011
Threads: 19
Posts: 237
I used to have a collection of old, mechanical, what are considered to be "antique" slot machines that worked with wheels and pullies. I often had to repair them myself.

There was no mechanism to trigger a scheduled win.

If the jackpot bin or holder got too full, there was an overflow bin at the bottom of the machine that would be emptied by the slot attendants (me, in my living room).

there were particular rows of quarters for payoffs for cherries or bells, etc. When the wheels chose the jackpot symbols the jackpot door would open and the jackpot would vary with the amount of play since the previous jackpot. If not jackpot hit in a long time, the quarters dropped into the overflow.

Well, thats how it was in these mechanical machines including my golden nuggets with the two nude gold ladies mounted on either side of the machine.

By the way, when the neighborhood kids came over with my step-son to play, I had to open the machine and push the wheels around to get a payoff to return their money. But they never told me when they "hit" and took my money. I think my living room was the first slot house that had a losing record for the house.
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Here are my reasons why and my promise of support.