pescetom, on 2024-July-27, 13:10, said:
Maybe I was a bit flippant, but I see no good reason to assign meaning to these bids if a new suit is forcing, as is fairly normal.
If it is not, then 4♥ natural and 3♠ natural GF seem clear, agreed.
pescetom, on 2024-July-26, 14:52, said:
If we do insist, I guess we have to revise the rest of system a bit (e.g. a modified Ogust to expose the 4+cM).
(from the '1 board, 5 different contracts' post)
Generally I think the emphasis on constructive systems over preempts is overstated. In my opinion preempts are firstly and foremostly competitive tools. The reduced amount of bidding space compared to pass or 1-level openings means you will not be able to resolve your choice-of-game, game-versus-partscore or slam-versus-game decisions with as much accuracy as you might want. Pick which aspects are most important to you and try to resolve those, then shrug and move on when you are dealt a hand unsuitable for them. I don't think there needs to be a particularly strong link between 'which hands are suitable for a preempt' and 'which features can be resolved with my constructive system after a preempt'.
Put differently, if I am dealt an offshape preempt and decide to open it anyway, it is because I expect the competitive benefits to outweigh possible constructive issues, by magnitude and/or frequency. Keep in mind that the weaker your preempts, the less often partner will have an invitational hand. Conversely, the more permitted shapes for a preempt, the more strains you have to investigate. You can adopt a more scientific system to resolve hand types, and actually I think there are some underexplored options here, but I think it will not have a huge impact on your score.