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29th August 2010, 05:39 AM
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Member
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Join Date: Jan 1970
Posts: 2,428
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To answer as to how many systems one can run .
Answer is , as many as you can, according to bank roll dedicated to each one.
Also the time one has to allocate for the processing.
I have run up to 115 systems all at once , using a computer program called GTX (Google it for info), that would do all the work for all the different selection processes.
It could make all the selections for the day in about 2 seconds.
I would have one bank & bet to a ratio 200/1 up & down for each day.
If one is going to use one big bank roll for the lot, I would not double up on any selection mentioned twice, due to a different system also selecting the same runner.
I found it was more profitable in keeping to this important rule because a runner does not have twice the chance of winning just because its mentioned twice.
When testing systems , its an idea to break them up into batches of 150 selections, this gives us an idea of how consistent the selection process can be.
Try not to be fooled into anything working long term with figures any less than this.
One would need at least 3 batches of 150 selections to get any strong indicators as to its future potential.
That's the problem with stagnant systems , they may only have a few bets a month so one would need a data base of at least 4 years to do the research.
Do expect runs of 20 outs in a row , they just happen, its part of the punting process & there is very little one can do about it except stop on a certain number of outs , there is probable nothing wrong with your plan , its just the ebb & flow of the punting process to get to our average expected figure at the end of the year.
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Cheers.
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