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Tools: Pyrapoint

The ideas behind the PyraPoint Tool were developed by Don Hall. For more information regarding
PyraPoint and how to trade the tool, you can order Don's PyraPoint Book. The book explains all the details,
calculations, and gives training on how to trade with the PyraPoint tool.
The PyraPoint Tool is a Gann based tool that uses Time and Price. Vertical and Horizontal lines are drawn on
a chart. Display a chart in Ensign Windows and click the Draw Tools button to show the Draw Tools panel.
Pyrapoint is selected by clicking the button with a square box and the capital P.

The cursor will change to a pencil while in the draw mode. Move the cursor to an important High or Low
turning point on the chart and then click the left mouse button. The Horizontal lines represent potential
support and resistance levels. The Vertical lines represent probable turning points based on Time. Diagonal
lines are used to intersect the Horizontal and Vertical lines. The market will often ''walk' up and down the
diagonal lines. Pyrapoint will appear using an appropriate degree of rotation parameter selected by Ensign's
proprietary artificial intelligence algorithm.

Adjusting
Re-selecting the PyraPoint tool will activate the ability to move it to a different location. Click the mouse on
the Zero starting point to re-select it. The cursor will change to a pencil. Drag the mouse from the Zero
starting point to a new location and the PyraPoint lines will move. Click the mouse again to complete the
draw phase.
Properties
To view the properties window click the Chart Objects button, select PyraPoint, then click the Properties
button to open the Properties window for the tool.

Normalize > 1000 - Place a check mark in the 'Normalize > 1000' box to prevent the Pyrapoint from
automatically adjusting the horizontal width of the PyraPoint squares when a market is at or near
1000 in price.

Normalize < 100 - Place a check mark in the 'Normalize < 100' box to normalize the study on 2
digits.

Price - The 'Price' box shows the exact price where the Pyrapoint is anchored. The Price can be
edited if necessary.

Degrees - Click the Up and Down selection arrows to change the Degrees setting. The Degrees
setting will effect the number of lines that are drawn on the Pyrapoint tool and how closely they are
spaced apart. When the Pyrapoint tool is in a selected state, you can also click the light-blue Up
(Previous) and Down (Next) arrows on the Controls Toolbar. This will also change the Degrees
setting.

Click the up or down spinner arrow to double or halve the Degree of Rotation parameter. 45 degrees is
shown in the example. Clicking the up arrow will change it to 90 degrees. Clicking the down arrow will
change it to 22.5 degrees. Also, you can enter any degree in the edit box. Entering a value greater than or
equal to 1 will be treated as degrees. Any value between 0 and 1 will be treated as a percent of 180 degrees.

A value of 0.5 is the same as 90 degrees. After selecting your preferred colors, Line Thickness and Line
Style, check the Use as Default box to save the parameters as the default.
To fully understand Pyrapoint, its mathematics, implementation, design, use and how to trade with
Pyrapoint, you need to buy Don Hall's Pyrapoint Book or Pyrapoint CD. The Book is a professionally
published 234-page hard cover book.
Now I would not bother to give you the mathematics in these other articles if I did not find application of
this theory in the charts.

Time and Price

Trend Line Slope

Square Root Theory

I used the mathematics given in the first two articles to develop the Pyrapoint draw tool which draws
horizontal lines at calculated price levels, and nearly vertical time curves at the calculated time intervals.
This forms a grid of trapezoids like the previous illustration. (Don Hall calls them 'squares'.) Diagonal lines
connect the corners of the trapezoids to give support and resistance trend lines.
Here is a daily chart of JNPR with the construction started on the highest high. All price levels, time
intervals, and trend lines are constructed mathematically from two pieces of information: the price $244.50
on the date 10-16-2000.

There is more in this chart than I have space to explain. But, I can point out some characteristics. The
horizontal price lines have a label on the left which is a degree of rotation around a Square of 9. This is
covered in the Pyrapoint book, but is beyond the scope of this article. Note that in my example, the time
lines are nearly vertical. This is a slight variation from the method of construction in the Pyrapoint book
which shows vertical lines. I feel that my presentation is appropriate because of the theory of the time curve
illustrated in my first article. The time curve forms the left and right sides of the trapezoid, and the price
levels form the top and bottom sides.
Time: Time is measured by the time curve, which is related to price. Tip: 'As price meets time, a change is
imminent.' Note the first time line labeled 12 on the bottom and 16 on the top. If price meets time at the -720
horizontal, then the time for the change would be the 12th bar from the top. If price meets time at the -540
horizontal, then the time for the change would be the 13th bar from the top. At the -360 horizontal, the time
change would be in the 14th bar. At the -180 horizontal, the time change would be in the 15th bar. At the 0
line, the time measured would be 16 bars. That is why the top of the time line is labeled with a 16, and the
bottom of the line is labeled with a 12. Starting at 16, for each 180 degree down the time count is reduced by
one bar, or for every 180 degree rise, the time count increases another bar. Note that the market did
experience a change when price met the time curve labeled 12 to 16!
The price at the 12 to 16 time line was used to obtain a forecast of the 2nd time line, which is labeled 25 to
31. As the price meets each time curve, a new time curve is calculated based on the price. Each of the time
curves shows excellent correlation with market change when price met the time line.

Prices: The prominent high of $244.50 is the calculation basis for all the horizontal price levels that are
shown. Tip: The market seeks out these price levels, and you can calculate these prices in advance. Note
how the market fell to the -540 horizontal, rallied to the -180 horizontal, fell to the -900 level, rallied to the
-540 level, fell to the -1080 level, and rallied to the -720 level.
Trend Lines: The downward 45 degree trend lines shown in red create a flow channel, or 'price highway' as
Don calls it. The upward 45 degree trend lines shown in green create a price highway going the other
direction. The red lines are resistance lines that the market must close above to change direction from
bearish to bullish. The green lines are support lines that the market must close below to change direction
from bullish to bearish. We all have used upward trend lines placed underneath action lows to indicate
support, and downward trend lines placed above action highs to indicate resistance. The beauty of this tool is
that these diagonal trend lines are computed in advance, and the market seems to have respect for them.
Price flows up and down the channels. The more you study the example, the more impressed I think you will
be with this tool.
Intra-day Charts
The Pyrapoint tool can also be applied to intra-day charts with good success. The size of the price interval
used on a daily chart seems to be too big for use on an intra-day chart. No problem. Don points out that there
are squares within a square. All one needs to do is sub-divided the price interval into halves, fourths, or
eighths. The time interval is determined from price and will not change.
One question that I have dealt with is this: If the time interval computes to be 11 bars because the price is at
121, which intra-day bar time frame should I use? If 1-minute bars are used, then we have a time curve 11
minutes later. If 2-minute bars are used, then the time curve would be 22 minutes later. If 5-minute bars are
used, then the time curve is plotted 55 minutes later. Now do you see why I have a question? The selection
of the intra-day bar time frame greatly affects the time interval measured by the next time curve.
Here is how I tackled the problem, and the proposed solution. I displayed a 1-minute chart and used a cycle
tool to measure in hindsight the cycle rhythm from bottoms to bottoms, tops to tops, and/or bottoms to tops.
When I found a cycle width that seems to fit by catching multiple turning points, I note the number of
minutes in the cycle. I use this formula to estimate a good intra-day time frame to use.
Intra-day Bar Time Frame = Cycle width in minutes / sqrt( P )
Example: On the JNPR 1-minute chart I found a 65 minute cycle when the price was around $133.
Therefore, bar time = 65 / sqrt( 133 ) = 5.6 minutes per bar. So, using a 6-minute chart, or possibly a 5minute chart should show a good fit with the Pyrapoint tool. I happened to have been following a 5-minute
chart, and I do find excellent correlation. I have used a smaller price interval by subdividing the 180 degree
interval into eighths in this example.

Please study the chart, and observe the flow of prices in the up and down trend channels. Note how trend
changes occur on or near the vertical time curves, and how the market seeks the horizontal price levels. This
entire road map is computed in advance from the prominent top that occurred on January 12th at 9:35 a.m.
Daily Charts
I thought you would like an update on how JNPR has continued to walk the Pyrapoint framework of
diagonal trend channels, horizontal support and resistance levels, and turns occurring on vertical lines at the
end of squares.

Our January example was through the end of the 5th square marked by the 62 to 59 vertical blue line. I was
amazed at how JNPR walked down the red diagonal lines to turn on the -1800 horizontal (tenth rotation of
180 degrees) and at the end of the 12th square marked by the 119-116 vertical line on April 3rd. The actual
low day was April 4th. Amazing indeed! (Sorry the closeness of the bar spacing causes the 120 label to
overwrite the 116 label which is below the low turning point.)

Pyrapoint is a draw tool built into the Ensign Windows program based on the work of Don Hall. Horizontal
lines are based on the Gann Square of Nine degrees of rotation from an important swing top or bottom. The
Vertical lines are based on the Gann principle of squaring time and price. The diagonal lines intersect the
corners of the squares formed by the horizontal and vertical lines.
Don Hall's Pyrapoint is a draw tool in Ensign Windows. This plots Gann's Square of 9. The starting point
was the market high. Everything else is projected into the future without manipulation. The blue horizontal
lines are major support / resistance for 45 degree squares from the high. The vertical lines are time periods.
Notice that the major turning points occur near these cyan vertical lines.

360 degrees of the Square of 9 is the bottom of the market on 03-22-2001, at a one year cycle from the
market high on 03-24-2000.
On 05-22-2001 we hit the 180 degree Square of 9 from the market high on 03-24-2000. The turning point
also occurred at an exact vertical time point. This gave a very strong sell signal along with others.
Phi = 1.618. 05-22-2001 is 424 calendar days from 03-24-2000 all-time S&P 500 high. Phi cubed times 100
= 424. 05-22-2001 is 263 calendar days from 09-01-2000 the S&P double top. Phi squared times 100 = 262.
05-22-2001 is 61 calendar days from 03-22-2001 low. 1 / Phi = 61.8
Helio cycles: Synodic: JU 15 from 11-06-2000 S&P high. JS 15 from 07-31-2000 low.
Sidereal: Mars 120 from 09-04-2000 Labor Day. 240 from 01-17-2000 holiday (01-14-2000 Dow high).
Geo: Moon-Sun-Saturn conjunction with Mercury-Uranus trine.
The helio cycles come from Brad Cowan. The geo marker from Myles Walker. Reference: Someone smarter
than I at the GannGhost group.

"I have used many, many software applications over the years and I have never seen anything nearly as
powerful and consistent and as elegant in its simplicity as Pyrapoint. I really thank you for such a wonderful
creation." - J. Pell 12-03-2000
"I must say, as a former ~~~ slave, I REALLY enjoy the simple elegance of the Ensign product. I also use
Pyrapoint, which was my introduction to Ensign, and you really did a great job with that too." -W. Sheppard 12-192000

'You went waaay beyond! Thank You. Everything quickly changed -and for the better- once we decided to
switch to eSignal so we could use Ensign Windows. We had also researched Pyrapoint; read the book and
purchased the Pyrapoint Wheel before we determined we needed to take the plunge. (We'd been with --- for
the last two years.) We haven't quite got Pyrapoint down yet but know enough to use it as a guide to help us
stay in a trade, or get out. We recognized the potential of the collective applications: eSignal, Ensign
Windows & Pyrapoint. Many thanks!' -E. Newman 10-26-2000
"I am very impressed with your work on the Pythagorean Cube (PYRAPOINT) system. Your use of multiple
trend lines (and thus squares) make a very neat and professional image -- also we are very impressed with
the flexibility and speed of movement of squares on the individual charts. GOOD WORK!" -- D. Hall 12-31-1999
"Since you are now looking in earnest toward the learning curve of Pyrapoint, a couple of things may well
assist materially. First, we do have software---and a very satisfactory one, I might add---it is designed by
Ensign. It is very affordable, and VERY user-friendly. Flexibility includes being able to move squares to any
top or bottom of your choosing for your studies and sync. The software is compatible with several data
providers: DTN, Interactive Brokers and eSignal. Most costs are added to the monthly fees paid to your data
provider, @ $49.95 per month where we are. Support is excellent, and Ensign keeps their updates for free
and often." -D. Hall 11-15-2000
"As noted in my earlier e-mail the count, the designation of degrees, the on going levels of squares, the
handling of the 'rounding'---all would make any Pyrapoint customer 'drool'---your work is FANTASTIC,
Howard. I am especially impressed with the simplification that your programming presents as opposed to the
problems of the different sized squares with off-sets. With your ability to move the overlays (squares) it
would not seem to reduce the ability to move to the 'initial force point' after a subsequent significant
violation of a diagonal. This makes it show even more perfectly---and it would make a dramatic presentation
for any student, in my humble opinion. My appreciation---and my compliments. It has really came together
effectively---with a very PROFESSIONAL LOOK!!!" -Don Hall 01-16-2001

read more January 2010 Soybean chart by Don Hall

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