Plastic or Paper
Dear Mark,
During conversation with one of the many rotating poker dealers
at the Horseshoe in Boosier City, he mentioned that the cards
they used for poker were essentially indestructible because they
were plastic and theoretically can handle a lifetime of use. What
is your experience in dealing them, and why are they not used
in all table games as opposed to just poker? John R.
The United States Player Card Co. of Cincinnati, Ohio manufactures
the majority of cards used in casinos across America. Despite
the use of high quality paper, laminating and enameling, the life
of these wafer-thin pasteboard products is quite short. On average,
cards are changed on a table game every hour, double decks every
two and on a shoe game every shift (eight hours). Even with this
limited lifespan, paper cards are substantially cheaper than their
plastic counterparts and would be cost prohibitive to put on all
of the casinos blackjack tables.
In poker you need cards that stand up to wear and tear as the
player handles the majority of the deck every hand. Additionally,
concealment of your playing hand in poker versus blackjack is
an issue, plus, plastic decks in poker rooms are seldom changed
during a shift.
Though plastic cards are indestructible and their durability far
surpasses that of a standard playing card, they do get dirty and
need a regular cleaning. In the golden days of gambling, cards
were washed by hand, by dealers, with seltzer water. Now they
use card washing machines.
My experience of using plastic cards is rather limited-actually
only twice-when a severe snowstorm in Reno cancelled a card shipment
over the Christmas holidays. This depleted the pit's inventory,
and blackjack dealers used the reserve from the poker room. Because
I found them much slicker than paper cards, harder to handle because
of their smaller size and flimsy when shuffling, I'm not an aficionado
of plastic cards.
Dear Mark,
Over the last two years I have been on the losing streak from
hell. Every slot machine I touch has been a loser. This past year
alone I have lost $5,000, which I might add, is more than I can
afford to donate to the casinos. My question is, when does a player
finally decide enough is enough and quit playing slot machines?
Anita J.
Because my rule #1 of gambling is "only bet what you can
afford to lose," followed by, "the smarter you play,
the luckier you'll be," NOW is that time. Consider in lieu
of slots, making wagers, within your means, on some of the smarter
bets I suggest weekly in this column.
Correspondingly, Anita, I would be remiss if I didn't recommend
finding an alternative form of entertainment. I know of one player
who when her slot play went sour, rancid to the tune of $10,000
in six months, quit gambling and became what she calls a lawn
hobbyist.
Now that's exchanging one form of manure for another.
Dear Mark,
What are your thoughts on video craps? Michael P.
Called Live Video Craps, this electronic version of a dice
game is offered by many casinos at 25¢ a roll. Cheap, yes,
but don't expect the same thrill and camaraderie as its table-game
cousin on a Saturday night. Plus the game has one expensive waterloo.
Excluding the 7, all numbers become the point. That includes the
2, 3, 11 and 12. This gives the house a 5% edge on your pass line
bet. That, Michael, is notably higher than the 1.4% advantage
the casino holds on a live game. For familiarity of the game of
craps at 25¢ a pop, OK; but wager no more.