Quote from neisykay:
the only trouble i am having is applying intraday to a nyse symbol - for example when there is a climax bar - during the day.
but i consider this my homework to apply.
The "climax bar", in and of itself, in isolation, may be only a warning of a change in momentum (a "yellow light"). Which is where S/R come in. Hitting S/R is like creeping into the kitchen in the dark and flicking on the lights to watch the cockroaches scramble (in college, anyway). Do traders scramble or don't they? What looks like a climax bar in real time may just be an "indicator" of an overbought or oversold condition.
[And by "overbought" and "oversold", I don't mean indicator settings. I'm referring to the original meaning, i.e., buying or selling exhaustion, at which point there are no more buyers or sellers, whichever the case may be.]
But unless that bar occurs at some important level, such as S/R of some sort, it's less likely to ignite the greed or fear that is required for a decent bounce, not to mention a sustained move.
Therefore, assuming you've found all your S/R levels before the open, look to what you think is a climax bar as a clue. Monitor the buying and selling pressure. Collect the evidence you need to determine whether this is just a pause, a continuation of the previous move, or a reversal. What looks like a climax may just be a preliminary "climax", or brake (I realize that, literally, a climax is either a climax or it isn't, but you get my drift).
And don't hurry. The market's here, open for business every day, and for every missed opportunity, there are several waiting in the wings, and a lesson learned.