Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: Bob33 on January 21, 2014, 12:13:00 PM"I just added up the numbers for Hangman and got 166,592/7/361 = 1:66 for someone with 19 points. If you also applied for three of the other less popular units (Kettle, Three Forks, etc.), overall odds with four choices should be down in the 1:25 range."A person with 19 points, assume he lives long enough does have some hope of drawing in his lifetime if he puts in for multiple units every year. Still, he would have to put in with the with 1 in 25 odds for 17 years to get to a 50/50 chance of drawing. Anyone with less than 19 points obviously has worse odds.Besides tag numbers and number of applicants, points creep could have a huge impact over time. Wonder what the trend is?
"I just added up the numbers for Hangman and got 166,592/7/361 = 1:66 for someone with 19 points. If you also applied for three of the other less popular units (Kettle, Three Forks, etc.), overall odds with four choices should be down in the 1:25 range."A person with 19 points, assume he lives long enough does have some hope of drawing in his lifetime if he puts in for multiple units every year. Still, he would have to put in with the with 1 in 25 odds for 17 years to get to a 50/50 chance of drawing. Anyone with less than 19 points obviously has worse odds.
Yea, this was my hang up to Bob's more simplified calculation of cumulative odds...the way the draw works there is not independence in the events...maybe he is still correct...and certainly if each moose hunt was an independent draw he is exactly correct...and given that so few tags are handed out maybe it doesn't make much of a difference.
Quote from: idahohuntr on January 21, 2014, 02:28:13 PMYea, this was my hang up to Bob's more simplified calculation of cumulative odds...the way the draw works there is not independence in the events...maybe he is still correct...and certainly if each moose hunt was an independent draw he is exactly correct...and given that so few tags are handed out maybe it doesn't make much of a difference. IF there were quite a few tags/permits relative to the number of applicants, it would be a factor. There were 75 "any moose" permits given out for 19,000 applicants. As each one draws, his names are "eliminated from the hat" which improves the odds of remaining applicants but not by very much due to the small number of tags.
Except that points are squared, meaning the "names in the hat" removed would be 19X19X75=27,075.
oh come on, somebody with one point cant draw and we all know it.
Quote from: deaner on January 21, 2014, 09:13:37 PMoh come on, somebody with one point cant draw and we all know it.And you base this on...?