Hello, I want to start a discussion about beating roulette with modern tools. There have been mentions in this forum about visual ballistics as a strategy to predict winning sectors, but the problem with that approach is that you need to do all the calculations in your head, which is very difficult—almost impossible.
From my observations and measurements, which I mostly conducted on the Alfastreet R8 machine, I noticed that the rotor speed is constant. If you know the wheel's position when the ball entered, you just need to precisely measure the ball's speed to predict, more often than not, the winning sector (which may vary from 7 to 14 numbers).
Do you guys have any ideas for building a tool or system that can help measure the ball's speed? By ball speed, I mean both the initial speed and the speed decay throughout its rotations in the first five seconds before the table closes bets. The entire strategy is based on the argument that having precise measurements of ball speed, speed decay, and the wheel's position at the ball's entry would reveal patterns linking these measurements to winning sectors.
I'm very convinced that if the strategy is executed semi-perfectly, it would significantly improve the percentage of winning bets. In other words, you would hit a winning number more frequently than by picking random numbers, where roulette statistics dictate that the house has a 1.35% edge.