First off, apologies for the disjointed post...

My BR has been built up by playing SnGs so it's been pretty easy - play pretty much everything you hit (unless it's nut or nutlike) quite fast. One thing I've learned in 6maxing though is really how hard postflop play is (and how much money is there)... so help!

A few other things: at the small limits (25NL and below), preflop raises of about 4bb and less get little to no respect and anything bigger gets no action. Is this typical?

How much benefit is there from slowplaying? It seems that hitting a moderately dangerous flop (say TPTK on a drawing board - ATo on a board of say Td 6s5s) is tough. Potting or near-potting never gets respect if the pot is $1 or $2.

I have also been frustrated when I turn straights or flushes. It seems that a 1/2 to 3/4 pot bet into a modest pot ($6-8) gets called with the accompanying Card Of Pain on the river (either a 3-flush against my straight or a 4-flush against my weakish flush). Is overbetting the pot a bad idea, in general?

Any general guides on playing flopped mid pairs against preflop raisers? I find it extremely difficult to call down increasingly large bets, even with position (say something like holding 9sTs on a board of KcTh3d). Now against many of the better players on 6max, their c-bet is credible. What is a typical line? check and see how the turn is? Reraise?

Fnord often speaks of players that tip their hand on the turn. What do you mean, fnord? One that comes to mind is the c-bettor whose flop bet was called (and stops betting on the turn).

Now this is read dependent, but how often would one try a play to steal the pot on the turn?

... so many questions. Thanks for any answers.