Tri-State Pick 3 Results
In the Tri-State Pick 3 draw on Friday midday, April 26, 2024, 420 came back after a 701-day wait in the New Hampshire draw record. Against the expected cadence of 1 in 1,000 draws (~500 days), the interval is well beyond typical spacing.
Winning numbers for 2 draws on April 26, 2024 in New Hampshire.
Draw times: Evening, Midday.
Our take on the Tri-State Pick 3 results
April 26, 2024Tri-State Pick 3 report — Friday midday, April 26, 2024: 420 returns after 701 days
In the Tri-State Pick 3 draw on Friday midday, April 26, 2024, 420 came back after a 701-day wait in the New Hampshire draw record. Against the expected cadence of 1 in 1,000 draws (~500 days), the interval is well beyond typical spacing.
Overview
In the Tri-State Pick 3 draw on Friday midday, April 26, 2024, 420 came back after a 701-day wait in the New Hampshire draw record. Against the expected cadence of 1 in 1,000 draws (~500 days), the interval is well beyond typical spacing.
A Long-Awaited Return
A gap of 701 days places 420 in the low-frequency tail of the distribution. The exact prior appearance date is not available in this view, but the duration alone signals an extended absence.
Combo Profile
The digits in 420 cover a moderate range (0 to 4) with no repeats.
Why Droughts Matter
Extended absences are context, not a forecast - they show where spacing departs from typical cadence. They make variance visible across extended windows.
Data Notes
Results are evaluated against historical frequency baselines where available. The goal is documentation and context rather than prediction.
From Stepzero
Stepzero produces these reports to provide a calm, evidence-first record of how draw patterns unfold over time. The aim is clarity and continuity - a reference point for long-horizon tracking rather than a call to action.
Additional Context
Context improves with scale. As more draws accumulate, isolated anomalies either normalize into baseline rates or reveal persistent deviations that warrant closer monitoring. Long-horizon tracking is the only reliable way to separate short-term noise from persistent drift. By logging each outcome against its expected cadence, the system builds a distribution profile that becomes more stable as the sample grows.
Adding to the Long-Term Record
Over the long run, this return adds a new point to the dataset to the long-horizon record. Stability comes from the growing record, not any one draw.