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No best answer has yet been selected by pjm007. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hooray! I've been dying to say this for ages but thought I might get laughed out of here! I've thought it was fixed from about the third week.
They could control how often the jackpot is won & by how many, & the amount won is enough to keep it more tempting than the pools. Otherwise why don't lots of people share it or why doesn't it go on for weeks & weeks? It's impossible to tell exactly where those balls fall from & there's enough time to sort the winning numbers.
It's high time they fixed it for me!!!
Maybe the reason Camelot would want to 'fix' roll-overs is for massive financial gain. Think about the amount of interest all those millions would acrue. I don't know how the draw machine would select chosen (or unchosen, as the case may be) numbers, but there must be a way to do it, what with all the technology available today. Also, the 'Independant adjudicators' they use, just how 'Independant' are they ?
I would be interested to see how peoples opinions differ on this thread, as i'm sure i'm not the only person to have doubts. What would be even better would be if someone could come up with some supporting evidence, for and against the matter.
I used to work at The National Physical Laboraory where the lottery machines were first made, I also know very well someone who won �850k. I can honestly say that it is not fixed at all. There would be no point in fixing it. What would be the benefits of fixing it?
The statistics for each number is changed each week, thats how they know if for example number 44 had been drawn 67 times.
The balls themselves are only alowedd to be used 3 times then they are destroyed