@Admiral747
(I only use the chart with gray candles on the daily active trader chart)
I have many screenshots explaining various setups. Also the page one explanation of C3 will explain things as well.
@Christopher84 is working on a video to explain the new setup... until then go back a few pages and read the comments and screenshots and of course watch during market hours.
The Horserider Volume lower study in the following screenshot has the MTF Triple Exhaustion study plotting the vertical lines numbered to show which aggregation it represents - the main chart shows the current timeframe exhaustion as dots
http://tos.mx/H7Xrhwx
The basic plot....
Look for entries when price enters or exits the horizontal supply or demand zones (I would add to that - when this occurs enter on a pullback usually a few bars after spark arrow(s) (in my experience) at which point the color of the
C3 line,
ATR Near Term Levels (dashed lines) will likely agree with the direction.
If candles enter the opposite zone and the zone is
wrapping/moving up or down with the candles this indicates the trend is
STRONG.
When the
supply and demand zones are close together or overlapping price will likely hang out in that zone for a while but when candles breakout above or below the supply or demand zone it will usually be a fairly significant move
(in my experience)
The
EMAD EMA's bouncing off the top, middle, or bottom line combined with the above usually makes for a safe entry. (Also for myself when triple exhaustion is inside the supply or demand zone this is an indication to watch for entry soon
((I have not been using the MTF triple exhaustion study))
Pay attention to the
Yellow line and the
Light green line which are previous key supply / demand zones... is the level being used as support or resistance? When the
Yellow line and the
Light green line are
inside the
horizontal supply or demand zones
These are key levels!
The ATR Near Term Levels as well as the EMAD lower can indicate where price should bounce during a pullback.