Re: [vpFREE] Re old topic: Bankroll

 

I posted a message several months ago about my home casino which has instituted a way to avoid tickets all together.
Since it eliminates the need to replace paper to print tickets I believe it may become another casino way to save money
like the elimination of coins.

The way it works when you want to cash out you send the money to your cash account on your players card and it can be
placed on the next machine you play. It works just like your bounce back bonus play except you of course do not have to
play it through to cash out with a ticket.

-----Original Message-----
From: Tom Robertson <madameguyon@embarqmail.com>
To: vpFREE <vpFREE@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Sun, Feb 6, 2011 2:27 pm
Subject: Re: [vpFREE] Re old topic: Bankroll

>On Sat, Feb 5, 2011 at 12:05 PM, <TedChee@aol.com> wrote:
>
>> Something I didn't see mentioned was tickets. Sometimes I'll just hold on
>> to large tickets because it's more compact than cash & I know I'm coming
>> back in the near future. Does anybody know how long these are good for & I
>> imagine expiration time varies by casino?
>
>Varies by casino.
>
>I believe every ticket has the expiration information on it. I have a
>ticket handy that says "Ticket Void after 30 days".
>
>I've occasionally had a ticket expire. It may still be cashed by going
>to the cage and complaining loudly enough. Success may depend on
>which casino, the amount, how long since it's expired, and who is
>actually working at the time.

Casino employees have generally been very flexible and generous with
me in my adventures with lost, expired, and almost unreadable cash out
tickets. It's hard to believe that I have yet to lose any value from
one. One from Terrible's had expired by a few weeks or so. When the
supervisor first looked at it, she thought that it was around a year
old and said that she wouldn't honor it, but when she realized the
actual time involved, she cashed it. A supervisor at Fitzgerald's
gave me the hardest time. The ticket was only for $10 and it had only
expired by a few days, but she wanted identification. I once kept one
in my car in the direct sun in the summer, which blacked it out so
badly that at first, I couldn't even find it, but, although it wasn't
easy for casino employees to read, they cashed it. Keeping good
records helps. I lost one but, since I could tell the supervisor
which machine I was playing, when I cashed out, and for how much, he
paid me for it.

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