I love raising ominously dry looking flops when I have multiple backdoor draws, the implied odds are great, either I pick up one or both of the draws I was hoping for on the turn and the flop raise gets me the free card on the river, or I'm reraised or brick the turn, in either scenario losing only the raise I made on the flop. I really like making a habit out of counting my outs to draws on the flop. Like JhTh on a board of Ah4c9d. Most people would bail for a 1/2 to 2/3 pot bet on the flop. Whereas I'm thinking, "If I can play this hand heads up, I have 8 outs to an open ended straight draw, and 8 outs to a flush draw, with 1 out to an open ended straight flush draw and one to a gutshot royal, and 6 outs to a pair that leaves me 5 possible wins" There are 22 cards I can catch on the turn that will probably have me drawing to the winning hand, and if villian has shown a tendancy to not re-raise flop raises, and check in front of the flop raiser on the turn if he only has top pair our reverse implied odds seem pretty good, as we're only investing more money in this pot if we make our hand. Did I mention we get fold equity on our flop raise

Just something to think about, the regulars will probably tear a new sphincter in this theory.