Quote from ProfLogic:
That is too far out there for me.
Regarding your concern for an as natural as possible arrangement of a chart, what do you think about Gann's squaring of time and price?
In other words, Gann set a specific scale of a unit of price to a unit of time (or vice-versa), and constructed the price and time axes of the chart according to that scale. If the price of the instrument had an average range of 10 points a day, he would set the price/time axes at a scale of 10 to 1.
Supposedly, that reveals patterns and relationships in the chart that are otherwise not possible to be seen in a regular non-scaled chart.
However, if that was the case, then every pre-90s trader who used hand-drawn charts, which naturally require a scale, would be able to see these relationships and supposedly be profitable, which we know is not true.
IMHO, Gann made more money marketing and selling his courses and books than he actually made trading, and Wyckoff was his partner-in-crime, an "affiliate" of sort, to borrow from modern-day marketing concepts, who had a piece of that pie, for marketing Gann's supposed ability to predict the markets. $5000 a course was no peanuts back in the 1920's.
It doesn't help the fact that the time period that Gann's prime years fell on was the most fertile breeding ground of all sorts of mystical ideas and concepts.
To this day, not one person has been able to replicate Gann's results, and yet there's hundreds of Gann "experts" who every other day claim to have cracked the "secret" to Gann's method, and yet they need to sell a book or course on how they did it, rather than actually trade it and make money from it! LOL.