Most of the material that I have read says to keep your standard opening raise the same whether you're raising with AA, 99, or AJs. This is so other players can't get a read on the strength of your hand.
Should this apply at low limits when you are multi-tabling and constantly changing tables? I think you can exploit the fact that most players won't remember how much you raised it to last time, especially if you don't PFR very often. To be totally honest, I can't remember how much a tight players standard raise is when I'm multi-tabling.
I'm going to experiment at the $10 NL tables and see what happens if I raise AA KK and AK to 9xBB and pot raise my other raising hands. I like 9xBB because 1 caller will make the pot almost 20 BB, and at a 100BB buy-in a 20BBs pot size on the flop is my threshold for paying off players that go all-in on the flop when I have a good flop. In other words if I raise it to 5BB with AA and get 1 caller and there's 11.5 BB in the pot and the flop is J 9 4 rainbow and the guy CRs me ( multi-tabling so no reads ) AI I'll muck my aces, I'm not losing 100BBs over a 11.5BB pot! ( I'm still at $25 NL, this might be different at higher limits, but I'm not there yet, my specialty is SnGs, just now learning ring game play). By raising it to 9BB I eliminate tough decisions, they can't bluff me out if I get a good flop. It also makes the pot big eneugh to finess all the chips off of the top pair without having to overbet the pot.
Has anyone else tried this? Anyone else have a threshold pot-size for giving a guy credit for a big hand and laying down an overpair to an AI bet?
