Cash Ball

The Quick Cash Cash Ball (CB) number printed on your ticket can only match the Tennessee Cash Cash Ball number printed on your ticket to be a winning match. Adding Quick Cash to your ticket is an additional $1.00 per play, totaling $2.00 per play. The Quick Cash instant win applies only one time to multi-draw tickets. Your best resource of Free Lottery Frequency Analysis for Cash Ball 225 (United States, Kentucky).

Cash4Life logo.

Cash4Life is an American multi-jurisdictional lottery drawing game; as of February 2020, it is offered by nine state lotteries, and is drawn nightly. Ticket sales began on June 13, 2014 in New York and New Jersey; the first drawing took place three days later.

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Rules[edit]

Each game costs $2 per drawing. Players pick five white ball numbers from 1 through 60 in the main field, plus one number from 1 through 4 from the second field, the green “Cash Ball”. Players also have the option to have the terminal randomly select the numbers in both fields. Matching all five numbers in the main field plus the Cash Ball wins, or shares ('split-prize liability'), the equivalent of $1,000-per-day-for-life, or $7,000,000 cash, at the winner's option. Second prize, however, can have multiple winners of $1,000-per-week-for-life and/or $1,000,000 cash. New Jersey Lottery regulations require that players choose either the annuity or cash option when playing. First- and second-prize winners who chose the 'annuity' option can change to the cash option after winning; however, the 'cash' option is binding and cannot be changed. [1]

New Jersey's Doubler NJ option[edit]

On May 15, 2017, New Jersey added an option, called Doubler NJ; it can be added to a Cash4Life ticket for an additional $1 per play. Any non-'for Life' prize is doubled. New Jersey remains the only Cash4Life state with such an option.

Odds and prizes[edit]

MatchesPrizeApproximate odds
of winning
(per $2 play)
White Balls
(60)
Cash Ball
(4)
Base PrizeDoubler NJ
51$1,000/Day for Life (or cash option)†‡1: 21,846,048
50$1,000/Week for Life (or cash option)†1: 7,282,016
41$2,500†$5,000†1: 79,440
40$500$1,000†1: 26,480
31$100$2001: 1,471
30$25$501: 490
21$10$201: 83
20$4$81: 28
11$2$41: 13

The overall odds of winning are approximately 1:7.76. The prize pool is 55 percent of sales.[2]

† The top two annuitized prizes, third prize, and the $1,000 Doubler NJ prize each have a liability limit. If there are an excessive number of winners of a 'lifetime' prize tier, such prizes will automatically be paid in cash to each winner.[1] Cash option values (which can change periodically) are $7,000,000 for the top prize, and $1,000,000 for second prize.

‡ The top prize is 'split-prize liability'; in essence, a non-progressive jackpot.

Winners of either 'lifetime' prize tier can receive cash in lieu of the lifetime annuity. Rules also vary by Cash4Life member: a ticket bought in Florida whose winner prefers the cash option must claim within 60 days of the drawing. New Jersey requires the cash/annuity choice be made when purchasing a ticket; a 'cash option' choice is legally binding, but an 'annuity option' ticket can be changed to the 'cash option' when claiming.

Drawings[edit]

The nightly Cash4Life drawings are held live from Studio B (a.k.a. the Cash4Life Studio) at New Jersey Lottery Headquarters at Lawrence Park Complex in Trenton, New Jersey at 9:00 p.m. ET on Livestream.[3] Each drawing is supervised by an auditor from Hamilton, New Jersey-based Mercadien P.C., a CPA and Asset Management firm.[4][5][6] The drawings were originally hosted by Erica Young until May 10, 2018.[7] The current hostesses are Lauren Berman and Jacqueline Knox. If either of them are unavailable, off camera announcers are used. The practice of using off camera announcers have been used particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Two drawing machines are used during each Cash4Life drawing. The larger machine (Magnum II) is used for randomly mixing the 60 white balls by using counter-rotating arms.[8][9] The smaller machine (Messenger Single Digit) mixes the four green Cash Balls by using a clockwise rotating arm.[10][11] Individually, the five white balls (several seconds apart) followed by the green Cash Ball are drawn; each ball drops through a hole at the bottom of the appropriate mixing drum. The drawing machines are manufactured by Smartplay International of Edgewater Park, New Jersey.[12][13]

As of July 1, 2019, Cash4Life is drawn nightly.[14] Previously, Cash4Life was drawn on Mondays and Thursday evenings.

Participating lotteries[edit]

MembersJoinedAdditional notes
FloridaFebruary 17, 2017
GeorgiaAugust 29, 2016
IndianaSeptember 19, 2016
MarylandJanuary 26, 2016
New Jersey†June 13, 2014Serves as the flagship lottery for Cash4Life.
New York†June 13, 2014Replaced Sweet Million.
PennsylvaniaApril 7, 2015
VirginiaMay 3, 2015Replaced Decades of Dollars, a multi-state game which ended as a Virginia-only game.
TennesseeNovember 1, 2015

† Original member

Cash4Life tickets representing four of the game's nine members

1998–2000 MUSL game[edit]

Cash4Life was also the name of a significantly different game offered from March 30, 1998 to September 7, 2000 by the Multi-State Lottery Association (MUSL). The top prize, $1,000-per-week-for-life (no cash option), was won if the player's primary set of two-digit numbers (00 through 99) matched those drawn. It was offered in Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, South Dakota, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and the District of Columbia.[15]

See also[edit]

  • Lucky for Life, a similar game that began in Connecticut (as Lucky4Life) in 2009; available in 25 states and the District of Columbia as of 2019.

References[edit]

  1. ^ ab'Cash4Life Game Rules'(PDF).
  2. ^New Jersey Cash 4 Life Game Rules
  3. ^https://www.njlottery.com/en-us/aboutus/contactus.html
  4. ^https://www.njlottery.com/en-us/drawgames/cash4life.html#tab-howToPlay
  5. ^'Cash4Life by CASH4LIFE'.
  6. ^'New York Lottery: Cash4Life'. Nylottery.ny.gov. Archived from the original on June 25, 2014. Retrieved June 25, 2014. (press release)
  7. ^https://1drv.ms/v/s!AptgyLLNTnZ9g75BmwF8TuIem5sxGw?e=EGV3Cx
  8. ^https://smartplay.com/lottery-products/magnum-ii-lottery-draw-machine/#1502120979536-559013e4-fa65
  9. ^https://1drv.ms/u/s!AptgyLLNTnZ9gstEpZMqXlRmN7fvIg[permanent dead link]
  10. ^https://smartplay.com/lottery-products/messenger/
  11. ^https://1drv.ms/u/s!AptgyLLNTnZ9gstEpZMqXlRmN7fvIg[permanent dead link]
  12. ^https://smartplay.com/lottery-products/messenger/
  13. ^https://smartplay.com/lottery-products/magnum-ii-lottery-draw-machine/#1502120979536-559013e4-fa65
  14. ^https://1drv.ms/u/s!AptgyLLNTnZ9g-oL8zY87x32gjK4DQ[permanent dead link]
  15. ^Barker, Thomas; Britz, Marjie (2000). Jokers Wild: Legalized Gambling in the Twenty-first Century. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 87. ISBN9780275965877.

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cash4Life&oldid=997821402'
Cash ball system at the Up-To-Date Store

Cash carriers were used in shops and department stores to carry customers' payments from the sales assistant to the cashier and to carry the change and receipt back again.

Cash balls[edit]

The earliest type was a two-piece hollow wooden ball which ran along sloping rails, carrying cash and sales docket or receipt. One set of rails sloped down from sales desk to cash office and another set sloped in the opposite direction. This was known as a cash railway. William Stickney Lamson of Lowell, Massachusetts patented this system in 1881. His invention soon attracted the interest of other shopkeepers and in 1882 the Lamson Cash Carrier Company was incorporated in Boston. A working example can be seen in the Co-operative store at Beamish Museum in North East England and one is still in its original location in the Up-To-Date Store, now a museum, at Coolamon, New South Wales.

Wire carriers[edit]

Rapid Wire carrier in Dartford Museum, Kent

The next type was a carriage suspended on pulleys from a wire between sales desk, launched from a catapult. The best-known types were 'Rapid Wire' and 'Air-Line.'

Air-Line Company
The Air-Line Company was based in the United States. It manufactured a Gipe designed system. A cord passed over multiple pulleys to propel the car. Lamsons took over Air-Line and cars usually have 'Air-Line' on one side and 'Lamson' on the other.
Baldwin
Baldwins were based in Chicago. Their cash carrier systems were usually known as 'Baldwin Flyers'.
British Cash & Parcel Conveyors
A British competitor to Lamson which eventually was subsumed.
Dart Cash
Dart Cash was a British company established by a grocer from Stoke on Trent, William Alfred Edwards. It was a simple gravity carrier patented in 1918. Later enhancements included a spring for propulsion. As well as wire systems, Dart also made Pneumatic cash carriers.
Gipe
Gipe were an American company founded by Emanuel Clarence Gipe of Freeport, Illinois. Gipe installations were popular in England.
Lamson
[1] The Lamson Company dominated the market. It was known at various times as the Lamson Cash Carrier Company, the Lamson Cash Railway Company, the Lamson Store Service Company, the Lamson Consolidated Store Service Company, the Lamson Company Inc. and in the UK the Lamson Engineering Company Ltd. Lamsons purchased the Rapid Service Store Railway Company of Detroit which licensed an invention by Robert McCarty of Detroit, Michigan and their system became known as Lamson Rapid Wire. They also made cable systems and pneumatic tube systems.
Sturtevants
Sturtevants of Boston, Massachusetts was an offshoot of an American company. They purchased part of Reid Brothers around the early 1920s and the pneumatic tube business of Cooke, Troughton and Simms. In 1949 they sold up to Lamson.[2]

Pneumatic tube systems[edit]

Several of the above companies also made pneumatic tube systems - see Lamson tube. They are still installed in a few shops. Modern pneumatic tube systems are also now used in supermarkets for moving cash in bulk from tills to the central cash office.

Notes[edit]

Cash BallCash Ball
  1. ^'The Cash Carrier Website'. Retrieved 2019-01-31.
  2. ^The Times, 27 April 1950[full citation needed]

Cash Ball Cash For Life

References[edit]

Cash Balloon Warzone

  • Buxton, Andrew (2004). Cash Carriers in Shops. Princes Risborough: Shire Publications. ISBN978-0-7478-0615-8.

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