gszes, on 2015-February-20, 11:56, said:
There is far too much chance responder made a temporizing 2h bid with the intention of converting to spades at the appropriate level. If responder had extra values the fact that you leaped to 4h surely would have triggered some slam move. The (probable) lack of a forcing major suit raise makes for a lot of temporizing. With AQxx QJT(x) Q(x) xx(xx) we have a horrid time bidding anything other than 2H and converting 4h to 4s. It is all well and good to say responder "promises" 5 hearts but compromises are made all of the time as long as there is a "safe" outlet (4s in this case).
This is inconsistent with bridge logic. It has been generally accepted for at least the last 50 years or so that if one is going to temporize over partner's 1
♠ opening with a hand that cannot make a systemic conventional raise, one bids 2m, almost always 2
♣, altho with 3=4=4=2 some would be reluctant to do so and would choose 2
♦. All beyond the most basic beginner would have a conventional forcing raise available with 4 card support and no side 5+ suit that they wanted to show.
With your suggested hand of a 4=4 major suit 11 count, one either limit raises or one uses the conventional game force raise, depending on style and mood. With the extreme of your suggestion, AQxx QJ10x Q xxxx, one would splinter or bid 2
♣.
Now, when I say 'generally accepted' for 50 years or more, I am basing that on my reading (and playing) for the past 40+ years, my reading of the Bridge World based on having ALL copies of that publication from 1937 to 2010 or so, and having an extensive collection of bridge books dating back to and far beyond the creation of the game we play.
As for the OP, I have not played any method in which 3
♥ would not have been forcing, so I can't speak from experience with that method, but logic suggests that 4
♠ is forcing, and thus a cuebid.
Consider a hand like Ax QJxxxx AKx xx
What else is he to do? Bid keycard? And find KQJxx AKxx xx Qx? Nice bidding.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari