Let $r(m)$ denote the residue class $r+m\mathbb{Z}$, where $0 \leq r < m$. Given disjoint residue classes $r_1(m_1)$ and $r_2(m_2)$, let the class transposition $\tau_{r_1(m_1),r_2(m_2)}$ be the permutation of $\mathbb{Z}$ which interchanges $r_1+km_1$ and $r_2+km_2$ for every $k \in \mathbb{Z}$ and which fixes everything else.
Question: Let $G < {\rm Sym}(\mathbb{Z})$ be a group generated by $3$ class transpositions, and assume that the integers $0, \dots, 42$ all lie in the same orbit under the action of $G$ on $\mathbb{Z}$. Is the action of $G$ on $\mathbb{N}_0$ necessarily transitive?
Remarks:
When replacing $42$ by $41$, the answer obviously gets negative since the finite group $$ G \ := \ \langle \tau_{0(2),1(2)}, \tau_{0(3),2(3)}, \tau_{0(7),6(7)} \rangle $$ acts transitively on the set $\{0, \dots, 41\}$. Therefore if true, the assertion is sharp.
There is computational evidence suggesting that there is, say, "a reasonable chance" that the answer is positive.
A positive answer would mean that groups generated by $3$ class transpositions are "well-behaved" in the sense that for deciding transitivity, looking at very small numbers is sufficient, and that for larger numbers "nothing can happen any more".
Added on Jun 20, 2015: A positive answer would however not imply that all questions on groups generated by $3$ class transpositions are algorithmically decidable.
A positive answer would imply the Collatz conjecture. On the other hand, if the Collatz conjecture holds, this would (by far!) not imply a positive answer to the question.
Added on Jun 20, 2015: The reason why a positive answer would imply the Collatz conjecture is that the group $$ C := \langle \tau_{0(2),1(2)}, \tau_{1(2),2(4)}, \tau_{1(4),2(6)} \rangle $$ acts transitively on $\mathbb{N}_0$ if and only if the Collatz conjecture holds.
There is a related question here.
Added on Jun 20, 2015:
Example of a group which does act transitively: the group $$ G := \langle \tau_{0(2),1(2)}, \tau_{0(3),2(3)}, \tau_{1(2),2(4)} \rangle $$ acts at least $5$-transitively on $\mathbb{N}_0$.
Example of an infinite group $G$ such that the numbers $0, \dots, 25$ all lie in the same orbit under the action of $G$ on $\mathbb{Z}$, but which likely does not act transitively on $\mathbb{N}_0$: $$ G := \langle \tau_{0(2),1(2)}, \tau_{0(2),1(4)}, \tau_{0(6),5(9)} \rangle $$
(Easy case.) The answer is positive for groups generated by $3$ class transpositions which interchange residue classes with the same moduli (this is the case where no multiplications and no divisions occur). Transitivity on $\mathbb{N}_0$ obviously cannot occur in this case. More precisely, if we have a group generated by $k$ such class transpositions, the length of an orbit is bounded above by $a_k$, where $a_0 = 1$ and $a_{k+1} = a_k \cdot (a_k + 1)$.
Since HJRW suggested to look for "undecidability phenomena": so far I don't know any for groups generated by $3$ class transpositions, but there are groups generated by $4$ class transpositions which have finitely generated subgroups with unsolvable membership problem.
For example, putting $\kappa := \tau_{0(2),1(2)}$, $\lambda := \tau_{1(2),2(4)}$, $\mu := \tau_{0(2),1(4)}$ and $\nu := \tau_{1(4),2(4)}$, the group $V := \langle \kappa, \lambda, \mu, \nu \rangle$ is isomorphic to Thompson's group V. Since the free group of rank $2$ and $V \times V$ both embed into $V$, it follows from a result of Mihailova that $V$ has subgroups with unsolvable membership problem.
Side remark: $V$ is actually also the group generated by all class transpositions interchanging residue classes modulo powers of $2$; in general, groups may get a lot more complicated once the moduli of the residue classes interchanged by the generators are not all powers of the same prime.
Update of Nov 10, 2016:
Unfortunately the answer to the question as it stands turned out to be negative. -- These days I found a counterexample: put $$ G := \langle \tau_{0(2),1(2)}, \tau_{0(2),3(4)}, \tau_{4(9),2(15)} \rangle. $$ Then all integers $0, 1, \dots, 87$ lie in one orbit under the action of $G$ on $\mathbb{Z}$, but $G$ is not transitive on $\mathbb{N}_0$ since $88$ lies in another orbit.
The crucial feature of this example appears to be that intransitivity is forced by the existence of a nontrivial partition of $\mathbb{Z}$ into unions of residue classes modulo $180$ which $G$ stabilizes setwisely. The modulus $180$ happens to be the least common multiple of the moduli of the residue classes interchanged by the generators of $G$.
This suggests to reformulate the question as follows:
Question (new version): Let $G < {\rm Sym}(\mathbb{Z})$ be a group generated by $3$ class transpositions, and let $m$ be the least common multiple of the moduli of the residue classes interchanged by the generators of $G$. Assume that $G$ does not setwisely stabilize any union of residue classes modulo $m$ except for $\emptyset$ and $\mathbb{Z}$, and assume that the integers $0, \dots, 42$ all lie in the same orbit under the action of $G$ on $\mathbb{Z}$. Is the action of $G$ on $\mathbb{N}_0$ necessarily transitive?
Remarks:
If true, the assertion is still sharp in the sense that the bound $42$ cannot be replaced by $41$ (cf. the first remark on the original question).
It is conceivable that the assertion needs to be further weakened a little by assuming that $G$ does not setwisely stabilize any union of residue classes except for $\emptyset$ and $\mathbb{Z}$. (Also in this case a positive answer to the question would still imply the Collatz conjecture.)
Added on May 15, 2018: This question has appeared as Problem 19.45 in:
Kourovka Notebook: Unsolved Problems in Group Theory. Editors V. D. Mazurov, E. I. Khukhro. 19th Edition, Novosibirsk 2018.