This guide explains what each function displays, what it is actually confirming, how to interpret it without assumptions, and how it fits within a multi-timeframe reading (without recommending specific timeframes). The indicator is understood as a “language”: each timeframe is a different chapter of the same book.
Note
Multi-timeframe reading philosophy
Oscillator Pro is not used to "pick the best timeframe" but to read coherence between structures:
On higher timeframes you see structure (regime, larger divergences, phases).
On mid timeframes you see construction (pullbacks, absorption, transition).
On lower timeframes you see execution (timing and micro-structure).
Warning
How NOT to use Oscillator Pro (anti-error rules)
Do not trade isolated signals without context.
Do not treat pressure or divergences as a "forced reversal."
Do not use the Fast Oscillator as the main indicator.
Do not turn internal levels (fibonacci, confluences, internal supports/resistances) into exact price levels.
Do not chase extended moves just because "there is a marker."
Do not ignore the regime: signals against the major structure require additional evidence.
What you are seeing
The main oscillator (wave/cloud) in blue and violet
A main reading (line) that reflects the market cycle
A white trigger line that acts as support or resistance
What it actually measures
How extended or compressed the current momentum cycle is (overbought / oversold)
Whether the market is in impulse, transition, or ranging
Internal pressure — the force behind the move, not just direction
What it is used for
Distinguishing real impulse vs transition/ranging
Evaluating pace: expansion, deceleration, re-acceleration
Base for interpreting all other modules (if the base state is not understood, signals are over-traded)
What it does
System-generated timing marks on the oscillator.
Note
Entry signals fire when the cycle exits an extreme phase — they help clarify entry timing, not predict direction.
How to use it
As confirmation within a relevant zone on the price chart (supports, resistances, confluences).
Much stronger when it coincides with pressure releasing or with any of the Oscillator Pro divergences.
Avoid using it in structureless markets (chop).
Warning
Not "buy here / sell here." It is a timing stamp when context already makes sense.
What it does
Highlights extreme pressure zones within the oscillator with colored dots on the main trigger line.
Green dots: Oversold — the asset is showing selling exhaustion
Red dots: Overbought — the asset is showing buying exhaustion
How to interpret
High pressure (overbought): the asset may be extended. Prepare, do not chase.
Low pressure (oversold): the asset may be at a floor. Watch for confirmation.
Warning
Pressure does not imply immediate reversal. A strong market can sustain pressure for extended periods. Use it for management (partials, stops, scenario preparation), not automatic execution.
Hyper Wave MA Fill
Behind the main lines, you will see a colored fill area:
Blue fill: Oscillator momentum trending upward
Purple fill: Oscillator momentum trending downward
This is an internal trend filter. Solid color = trending regime. Rapidly alternating = choppy conditions.
Internal lines (upper/lower) that appear as relevant zones within the oscillator where multiple readings align.
Not price support/resistance. It is the oscillator's internal confluence.
Note
Marks zones where multiple internal readings align — useful for avoiding trades "in the middle of nothing."
Fixed horizontal levels within the oscillator (reference zones at 84, 64, 50, 36, 18).
Use as a context map: "Are we extended or in equilibrium?" Look for confirmation at these zones, not exact entries.
Note
These are not price-based Fibonacci levels. They are fixed reference zones inside the oscillator to measure how extended or compressed the cycle is.
What it does
A smooth long-term reference line through the oscillator. It defines the internal trend direction — signals aligned with it are stronger, signals against it need more confirmation.
How to use it
Signals aligned with the trend require fewer extra confluences
Signals against the trend demand more confirmation (zone + pressure + divergence)
Crosses are context, not triggers
What it does
Yellow highlight on the trigger line when the system detects that momentum has exited an extreme zone — a confirmed exhaustion/reversal condition.
Note
The yellow highlight means the trend may have peaked — a "caution zone" where you should protect profits rather than add positions.
How to use it
Management: protect profits, reduce exposure, avoid adding late
Confirmation: gains weight if it coincides with pressure, confluence, or divergence
Warning
Does not mark the exact tick of the turn. Not a standalone entry trigger.
What it does
Green triangle at the bottom of the oscillator when a confirmed expansion/breakout is detected. It confirms the market has shifted from recovery into expansion.
Warning
Wait for a retest of the broken level — if it holds, the move is confirmed. If price falls back below, the signal is invalidated.
Highlighted reversal/continuation zones on the trigger line in yellow.
Note
Detects when the cycle transitions from an extreme back toward recovery — can mean a bounce or trend re-engagement depending on context.
How to use it
Re-entries after corrections if price is at a support zone
Technical reversions if coincides with pressure and zone
Works best when NOT against a dominant larger structure
An additional cloud that reacts faster to shorter cycles.
What it measures: The speed of impulse (high sensitivity). Identifies expansion/contraction before the main oscillator.
How to use it
Confirm timing: expansion supports continuity, contraction suggests pause/transition
Useful for fine execution, always subordinate to the main Hyper Wave reading
Warning
Not an independent system. Amplifies noise if traded alone.
What it does
Colors price candles when the oscillator detects internally relevant conditions.
How to use it
Quick visual filter: "is the market active or flat right now?"
Not a direction signal — an attention filter
If candles are colored, it is a good area to start looking for entries
Color
Meaning
What to do
Green
Sustained deep momentum (multiple bars at extreme)
High attention — look for setups
White
Fast cycle at deep extreme
Watch for quick reversals
Yellow
Primary cycle at deep extreme
Prepare — cycle is stretched
Dots at high/low zones of the oscillator.
How to use them
Zones where it makes sense to look for confirmation (entry, divergence, pressure)
Useful for structuring stops/management if they align with your price reading
Factor: Lower (1-3) = more sensitive. Higher (7-10) = more filtered, fewer but stronger signals.
Note
These are not price support/resistance. They mark internal reaction zones where the market tends to pause or rotate.
Divergence markers on the oscillator panel.
How to use it
Prepare scenarios: "there is loss of strength"
Strongest when coincides with: pressure, general confluences, internal supports/resistances, cycle extension (internal levels)
Note
A divergence signals loss of strength — not an automatic reversal, but a warning to prepare.
Warning
A divergence does not invalidate a strong trend. It may anticipate correction without changing the trend.
Triangle icons directly on the price chart marking confirmed divergences.
Same information as the panel divergence, but visually "executable." Especially useful for alerts and for those who trade watching the price chart, not the oscillator panel.
Signal for "confirmation mode": look for reaction at zone, structure, pressure
Do not execute automatically; execute with confirmation
Lines drawn on the price chart only when a valid divergence is confirmed. Not a continuous overlay.
If there are no lines: there is no valid divergence detected in the current range.
Useful for visualizing the exact structure of the divergence (two relevant pivots)
Good for clean reading and for explaining setups
Last updated on
March
25,
2026
