
Thanks, Wentworth! Your explanations are great for how you do this.
I see the difference now between what you do
(your tweaking) and my instructions.
You are stacking the lines and seeing what touches. If you see pairs repeating, then those are your targets pairs. Bingo and you run with them!
You are incorporating some of my early teachings, to look for repeats! That's right! Nice! That's creative! That's smart! :)
In my examples, there is no stacking the lines and looking for touching pairs.
Each line is viewed separately. Each line stands alone. Each line can be mini system in its own right.
So for example, after back testing different wins in your state, a trend or pattern may reveal that most hits are coming from the last line results, on a consistent basis.
Or perhaps, midday hits are coming mostly from the first line results.
Or triads hardly ever show from the middle line results.
Or that one log is better for evening future hits and the other for midday future hits.
Or there is no difference, as both logs' performances, overall are equal.
Those are some of the advantages of working with one line at a time. It is also can be an all important budget monitor.
To make it easy for you, since you had already used the
Associate Numbers Log, I was requesting that you show
the other log example using the "same" number of 278 for
Tristates.
Then we could see the comparison of the results from both logs, with the same hit number and using your (tweaked and stacked lines) method.
It may have confused some people, when you used a PA hit from October as your example.
In the next post, I will give a template for this method.
This template will serve as a guide for this system. It can be tweaked. It can be modified and shown as mirror or flip number, and etc.
*Or one of my favorite ways is to use the lines to find the missing digits due. Those missing numbers often show up as the 3rd number missing from pairs or the 4th number missing from triads, even as due/cold pairs and triads.
You can see where this is leading, can't you? New methods! That's right! And now that I have mentioned these potential future methods, I don't have to post them, do I? lol
Thanks again, Wentworth, for stepping up to the task and showing how successfully you are using my most recently introduced Lottery Bible method! 
I appreciate you, Wentworth!
Everyone is welcome to do this "homework" and post their work here. There is great value in doing and showing (posting) your work. Everyone wins, when the homework is posted! Even the teacher! :)