Well hullo all...

First post here, so please be gentle...

I've been playing online on and off for a couple of years, and have made the switch from SNGs to FR cash games, which I started playing in earnest in December last year. I built a roll from $120 to $900 at UB, starting with SNGs to build the roll to $300 and then playing mainly $10 and $25 NL. Having withdrawn a load of cash (partly to cover all my learning taxes from various sites when I really, really, really sucked) I've now dumped $450 into Full Tilt and I want to start multitabling properly. As the $450 is clear profit, I'm hoping that I won't be playing scared money.

At UB I did ok at the $10 limit, running around 4ptbb over 5k hands, and did well at the $25 limit, running 12ptbb/100 over around 11k hands. I know it's a small sample size, but with FTR's help (been an avid reader for yonks) I've started to try and improve my game, recognising where I got lucky and where I've actually played ok.

I'm back down at the donk stakes at $10 NL FR, and intend to stay there while I build a decent roll (1k before I move to $25) and while I get used to multitabling. However, I think I suck at these stakes, particularly when running more than two tables, with the wider range of hands that people play.

Anyone got any tips on how to play multiple tables effectively? I run PT and PAHUD. Is it a case of playing purely hand by hand against HUD stats, or is there more to it that I haven't figured out yet? I feel my biggest problem is picking up non-HUD-stat reads on players when I'm constantly jumping between tables, particularly when opps flip mediocre holdings when I'd pegged them for much stronger hands.

My stats at UB were something like 17/7 to 16/10 depending on level (I'm already working on hand selection and PF/post flop play), but what should I expect when multitabling? Is supernitty (ie 10/7) normal or is it possible to play a wider range profitably? Or at $10 tables should I be aiming for something like 20/15?

Any thoughts, tips, stats etc would be most helpful.