this one seems good ?
https://www.mql5.com/en/market/product/113684
Jeff
Re: List of Good Free EAs
2They call it The Night Swimmer! What you got there Jefferson.. looks fabulous on paper and boy you sure love your robots don't you
Re: List of Good Free EAs
3this one lets you select indicators and then make a strategy out of it !
looks not bad
didn't thest it tho
https://www.mql5.com/en/market/product/88634
free until 01.06.2025 but if you download it before the date you'll have access for free once it's paid (I did download another free EA in the past that went paid and I can use it for free now)
looks not bad
didn't thest it tho
https://www.mql5.com/en/market/product/88634
free until 01.06.2025 but if you download it before the date you'll have access for free once it's paid (I did download another free EA in the past that went paid and I can use it for free now)
Scalping the Century TimeFrame since 1999
Re: List of Good Free EAs
5this EA is a martingale, but it seems to close losses
in backtest it's not bad
https://www.mql5.com/en/market/product/137965
Jeff
in backtest it's not bad
https://www.mql5.com/en/market/product/137965
Jeff
Scalping the Century TimeFrame since 1999
Re: List of Good Free EAs
6Hey Jeff and @ionone,
Some of these EAs you're sharing look really promising—especially the ones that handle martingale logic in a smarter way like closing losses instead of letting them run. I've been testing a few similar setups myself lately.
If you're running martingale strategies and want to stress test risk scenarios, I’ve been using a custom calculator that models different levels, account drawdown, and required balance. Might be useful if you're tweaking those EAs: forex-martingale-calculator.com
Let me know if you've tested the Night Swimmer in live conditions—on paper it looks slick, but I'm curious how it behaves with real spreads and slippage.
Some of these EAs you're sharing look really promising—especially the ones that handle martingale logic in a smarter way like closing losses instead of letting them run. I've been testing a few similar setups myself lately.
If you're running martingale strategies and want to stress test risk scenarios, I’ve been using a custom calculator that models different levels, account drawdown, and required balance. Might be useful if you're tweaking those EAs: forex-martingale-calculator.com
Let me know if you've tested the Night Swimmer in live conditions—on paper it looks slick, but I'm curious how it behaves with real spreads and slippage.