- we play "15-17" 1NT on prime boards, and "12-14" on non-prime boards.
- we play UD if dummy has a piquet, standard otherwise"
For Reasons, I don't post there, but this all is an interesting question.
My response to this is the same one I use with Obvious Shift players: "So, on this auction with this dummy, what's the obvious shift suit?" There's 12 rules, they know how it works, and there is a single specific answer. I'm not asking if they're asking whether the 6 is high or low, or anything else that requires knowledge of their hand.
It's the same response I give to the symmetric relay pairs who say "he showed hearts, then diamonds, then longer lower suit, then equal shortage, then 8 QP with either no controls or two controls in the longest suit, one in the next longest, then none or two in the highest of the equals." "So, give me shape, and which suits controls have been shown. I understand what queen points are, but partner might not."
I've always got a contented answer to this question from people playing these unusual systems requiring different analysis (but no bridge judgement) than standard, because they're not trying to confuse the opponents. I assume the people who are doing the "15-17 if prime" are hoping people won't or can't work it out (sure, 1NT will be announced when bid, but this hand they opened 1♦. I *still* want to know their NT range on this board, don't you?) and may not be so welcoming.
So, legally, given the concept of Full Disclosure and the Laws and (common) regulations pertaining, is "so, on this deal [with this auction and dummy], what is [your agreement]?" a question I can require an answer to? As a player? As a Director? Can the players insist this get explained to the Director in a way he can understand, and then get that understanding from the Director? If the last, and the Director misunderstands what was explained, do the players get protection from the "misexplanation"? Should there simply be a quarter-board penalty for attempting to avoid disclosure by insisting they work it out (not, I want to make clear, for playing this weird variable in the first place - that's perfectly legal)?