Good Morning. 
Michael B

Michael B

). If you go to work, just have your platform turned on and when you hear on audible alert, cancel and re-enter your new bracket.Quote from taodr:
What happens when you change time in trades ? In other words how would profit/ loss be if you only trade 9.30 to 5 est. I have found for example although there are good moves afterhours if I don't sit and manually manage positions , when I wake up next day or don't pay attention , I could be under the water considerably. I even find waiting until say 9.45am before entering ensures a larger profit. But easier said than done.
. There is a dynamic for each section of the rubberband. As the rubber band stretches it reveals that "slice of dynamic".
)Quote from steve46:
Hello Michael:
Reading your comment about backtesting, I have to confess my bias. I believe that backtesting does not work. The reason is that the basic premise is not valid. What you do when backtesting is to start with a sequence of actions in response to market price (when the market does A, then enter long, when it does B, exit). There is an implicit relationship between the two sides of the equation. Unfortunately that relationship of one price point to another is a dynamic rather than a stable relationship. That is why you can backtest and develop a system that seems profitable on paper. But when you go to real time trading, you find that the drawdowns are greater than you expected, the number of consecutive losers escalates, and the per trade profits start to slip until you no longer have the confidence to pull the trigger. So what do you do then? Well surprisingly the answer is stop backtesting and start testing for correlation and dependency. What you want to do is to find a relationship between to points on a price chart whose correlation is as close to 1 as possible (This is basic stats Michael, if I can learn it anyone can), Then you measure the strength of that relationship by testing for dependency (there are two kinds of dependency, and again this is something you can learn about if you want to just using google). Once you find a stable correlation between two points that exhibits dependency, you can then propose a method of trading that says, "if I see price move to point A, then go long". "When it moves to point b, exit". If you think about it, this is the opposite of what people are doing with Tradestation and other backtesting platforms. Instead of trying to make the market fit your system, you are finding out how the market moves and designing your system around that movement. I appreciate the opportunity to offer my opinion. Hope it helps in some way. Steve46
P.S. By the way, this has been discussed before on ET, by Acrary. look at his posts and you will find examples of correllation and dependency that may help make it easier to understand.