#比特币波动性 says a bitter lesson: When I first entered the market, I focused on the 1-minute chart to trade, fearing a pullback and running away when it rose a bit, and fearing getting liquidated and playing people for suckers when it fell a bit, which left me extremely stressed. Later, an old sucker woke me up by saying, "You are looking at the map with a magnifying glass; how can you not get lost?"
I am currently using a three-layer filtering method, which is simple but effective:
First, look at the 4-hour chart to determine the overall direction. In a rising trend, look for pullback positions to go long; in a falling trend, catch the rebound to go short; if it's sideways, just rest and don't do anything foolish.
Looking at the 1-hour chart again, draw out the key price range; this is your battlefield boundary.
Finally, watch the 15-minute chart for signals - when the reversal pattern appears and the trading volume increases, that's when to take action.
In simple terms: the 4-hour chart determines the direction, the 1-hour chart sets the range, and the 15-minute chart controls the rhythm. The win rate is only high when the three lines point in the same direction, so don't rush to place a bet.
In addition, small timeframes must have stop losses, this is for survival. I now spend half an hour reviewing after the market closes every day, specifically to remedy the habit of being led by short-term fluctuations. $BTC $ETH These mainstream coins are the most stable with this method, just try it and you'll know.
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GateUser-9ad11037
· 11-26 07:09
When I was watching the 1-minute chart, my hands were shaking. I'm also using this three-layer method now, and it really works.
However, I still get repeatedly stopped out and end up looking for my teeth everywhere; the three-layer method can't save greedy people.
Every time I look at the 4-hour chart to decide the direction, it feels pretty good; I can finally get a full night's sleep, haha.
Honestly, setting a stop loss is the hardest part. Clearly, I set it but then manually deleted it; this bad habit is impossible to quit.
This method sounds simple, but very few can actually stick with it. I've seen a bunch of people say this is stable, yet they still instantly turn into short-term traders.
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BlockImposter
· 11-24 01:29
Using a magnifying glass to look at the map, haha, this metaphor is perfect. I used to be like this too, getting so nervous looking at the 1-minute chart that my hands would shake.
The three-layer filtering is spot on, but it's easy for the retail investor mentality to explode when executing it.
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SybilAttackVictim
· 11-23 22:21
Haha, isn't this exactly my tragic story? Staring at the screen until my eyes are blurry.
I should have used multi-timeframe filtering a long time ago. The one-minute chart really is an IQ tax.
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LiquidatorFlash
· 11-23 11:49
Damn, that 1-minute chart was really a nightmare... I used to be like that too—once leverage was on, my brain would go straight to the ICU.
Multiple time frame analysis can definitely be a lifesaver, but the key is having iron discipline. A lot of people learn the triple filter method but still can’t break the habit of overtrading, and end up getting liquidated before their threshold is even triggered.
I agree with you on stop-losses, but looking at your approach... you only enter after a 15-minute signal appears. How much reverse liquidation risk are you missing out on? How do you calculate the data?
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NeonCollector
· 11-23 09:40
I can relate so much to the part about becoming nervous and exhausted; I was also like that back then.
The three-layer filter sounds good, but I'm just worried I won't be able to execute it; I always want to make quick money.
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SilentObserver
· 11-23 09:34
The metaphor of looking at the map with a magnifying glass is brilliant. I was played for a sucker like this before, haha.
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The three-layer filtering is right; the key is really to endure the sideways and not make a move.
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The point about stop loss is correct; any trade without a stop loss is gambling.
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Reviewing for half an hour every day? I need to learn that; I keep getting messed up by short-term fluctuations.
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Using the 4-hour chart to determine the trend is indeed more reliable; it's so much better for my mindset than staring at the 1-minute chart.
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Using this approach with mainstream tokens is more stable; small coins still need to be looked at differently.
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LuckyBlindCat
· 11-23 09:34
Oh my, that line about using a magnifying glass to look at the map is brilliant, I also play like this every day.
I should have listened to this trap of three layers of filtering earlier, it would save me from exploding every day.
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GateUser-a180694b
· 11-23 09:25
Ha, the saying about using a magnifying glass to look at the map is brilliant, I've done that too.
The one-minute chart can really drive a person crazy, it ruins your mindset completely.
This three-layer filtering is indeed a way to go, but to be honest, sticking to it is what’s really hard.
I agree with the four-hour chart, but the one-hour chart is easy to start messing up the plan.
The 15-minute chart often disrupts the rhythm, I always get impatient and place orders too early, it's still greed at play.
Writing down stop loss is easy, but when you’re really losing, you can’t bear to cut it.
Spending half an hour on review is a bit idealistic, most people just zone out during the review.
Mainstream Token is indeed more stable, but this method isn’t 100% safe, risk is still risk.
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OnChainDetective
· 11-23 09:20
ngl the multi-timeframe thing checks out... been running similar pattern analysis on whale wallet movements and the correlation is actually statistically significant. when all three timeframes align, transaction clustering typically confirms the move within 4-6 candles. interesting that most people miss this because they're too busy chasing noise on the 1min.
Reply0
FOMOrektGuy
· 11-23 09:18
Damn, I have so much to say about that 1-minute chart. My mind was really messed up back then.
Bro, your three layers of filtering are spot on. That's exactly what I'm doing now, and I’m definitely surviving much longer.
#比特币波动性 says a bitter lesson: When I first entered the market, I focused on the 1-minute chart to trade, fearing a pullback and running away when it rose a bit, and fearing getting liquidated and playing people for suckers when it fell a bit, which left me extremely stressed. Later, an old sucker woke me up by saying, "You are looking at the map with a magnifying glass; how can you not get lost?"
I am currently using a three-layer filtering method, which is simple but effective:
First, look at the 4-hour chart to determine the overall direction. In a rising trend, look for pullback positions to go long; in a falling trend, catch the rebound to go short; if it's sideways, just rest and don't do anything foolish.
Looking at the 1-hour chart again, draw out the key price range; this is your battlefield boundary.
Finally, watch the 15-minute chart for signals - when the reversal pattern appears and the trading volume increases, that's when to take action.
In simple terms: the 4-hour chart determines the direction, the 1-hour chart sets the range, and the 15-minute chart controls the rhythm. The win rate is only high when the three lines point in the same direction, so don't rush to place a bet.
In addition, small timeframes must have stop losses, this is for survival. I now spend half an hour reviewing after the market closes every day, specifically to remedy the habit of being led by short-term fluctuations. $BTC $ETH These mainstream coins are the most stable with this method, just try it and you'll know.