MrAce, on 2015-April-28, 15:01, said:
Art...do you have any written source that suggests, even just as an alternative, to play RKCB in a manner which says "we have all missing keycards" when one asks for Q? Let alone it being traditional?
Because this is the first time I heard about it. Blackwood was invented in early 1930s if I am not wrong. Later RKCB was invented by Italian team. Traditional slam bidding of RKCB; required minimum for small slam 5 keycards or 4+Q. All this time I thought this was the traditional slam bidding when it comes to RKCB. And that asking Q is a must frequently in small slam bidding. I am horrified with the idea that my pd can jump to grand thinking that we have all other key cards and/or not being able to ask Q just because we are missing a keycard and all I need is trump Q.
Sorry to spoil things, especially Justin's hopes for the response, but I think you are being unfair to Art, probably due to not having tracked how his last post came about. I think that the 'second ask' to which he references is to asking for Kings, which in normal keycard or blackwood has long guaranteed all the keycards/Aces.
He started the posts that led to the one you responded to in response to a weird post by gszes who suggested that he would use keycard, then ask for the Queen, and sign off even if partner showed it, and that he would 'leave it to partner' to go to 7, because by asking for the Queen he had shown all the keycards, and partner could work out that he needed something more than just all the keys and the spade Q. Art quite properly took exception to this, but the 'second ask' phrase crept in somewhere, and left his last post reading quite differently from the messages he was posting earlier.
See posts 12 and, especially, 21, and Art's posts in response
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari