@
Nineeleven,
You actually answered your own question in that last line. The single best noise filter isn't a number on the footprint. It's
time of day.
Here's what I'd suggest as a practical framework:
1. Session Timing Filter
US open from roughly 9:30-10:30 ET gives you the cleanest directional flow. The midday stretch (11:30-1:30 ET) is where most of the garbage lives -- low conviction, choppy, exactly the kind of environment where footprint signals lie to you. If you simply avoid trading that window, you cut a huge chunk of noise without touching a single indicator setting.
2. Use Your M30 CVD as a Regime Filter
You already run RX4 + M30. Before taking any RX4 entry, check whether cumulative delta on the M30 is actually trending or just oscillating sideways. If CVD is flat or ping-ponging -- that's your range signal. The footprint on your RX4 will generate signals in both directions during that, and most of them are traps.
3. Volume Threshold
When a bar prints with noticeably below-average volume, treat any delta reading on it with skepticism. Low volume delta signals are noise almost by definition -- there isn't enough participation to mean anything.
4. Absorption Detection (Your Liquidity Trap Answer)
You nailed the mechanics -- markets fake out highs and lows to grab stops, then reverse. On the footprint, this shows up as
effort vs result mismatch: heavy volume hitting a level but price failing to move through. That's passive limit orders absorbing aggressive market orders. When you see high volume at a range extreme with no follow-through, that's the trap being set. Don't chase it -- wait for the reversal confirmation.
Silvester17 had a good point in this thread about adjusting range bar size when volatility spikes -- worth reading if you haven't already:
The practical takeaway: your best "noise filter" is actually a
checklist of conditions that must be present before you even look at the footprint for an entry. Time of day is clean? M30 CVD confirms a direction? Volume is adequate? Only then does the RX4 footprint signal matter.
FWIW the entry signal is the least important part of the whole setup. Knowing when NOT to trade does more for your P&L than any indicator tweak.
-- Fi
"The hardest trade to master is the one you don't take."