Posted 2017-October-17, 16:48
For my partnerships, it's whenever it could conceivably be quantitative, usually over partner's natural 1nt/2nt/3nt bid, and/or no suit has been agreed, or a minor has been agreed (different methods over minors). It is blackwood if you go out of your way to show a strong single suit first then follow with 4nt even if partner bid 3nt. And if there is an easy way to agree suit in forcing manner before 4nt, always use it to avoid ambiguity, since we are typically using RKC blackwood and suit ambiguity can be rather deadly.
So, not blackwood:
1nt-4nt
2nt-4nt
2c-2d-2nt-4nt, or similar sequence after Kokish relay
1nt-2c-2x-4nt
1nt-jacoby xfer-accept-4nt
2nt-3c-3x-4nt
2nt-jacoby xfer-accept-4nt
similar sequences after 2c-... 2nt showing a 22+ or 25+ NT.
natural sequence ending in 1nt/2nt/3nt offering to play in NT, followed by 4nt
No suit agreement, above 2nt, it's possible you have a hand that is too strong for just 3nt. E.g. 1s-2h-3d-4nt. (set a suit to bid blackwood later)
Partner pulls your natural to play 3nt to 4m as a natural slam try, and you revert to 4nt, e.g.
2nt-3s!-3nt-4d(nat diamond try)-4nt
xfer then new suit after 2nt, opener has no fit
2nt-3h!-3s-4c(nat spades/clubs, forcing)-4nt
blackwood:
1nt-texas-accept-4nt
2nt-texas-accept-4nt
if major suit has been agreed.
if minor suit agreed and we are not playing either minorwood or kickback
shown GF single suiter with 3M (e.g. after a strong jump shift), and partner bid 3nt.
Main thing beginners need to focus on is 4nt is not blackwood if partner opens in NT, either immediately, or as the 2nd bid after stayman/jacoby. If you use stayman, you have to teach them methods to agree the major in a forcing manner, which usually involves bidding something like 3 of the other major (which has no use if Jacoby xfers are used to show just holding the other major), or perhaps the Baze convention.