The dials so far read the world around price — funding, open interest, how the crowd leans. Now CoinLAB reads the price itself — forty-two of its moods, all live.
Open the indicators screen and you'll find three tabs — Momentum, Trend, and Volatility — holding forty-two gauges between them. Is price overheating or oversold? Is the move forceful or fading? Is the market calm or swinging wildly? Each dial answers one small, specific question, and every one of them is read fresh from the live candles.
It's the widest set of price tools on the site by far — the kind of wall you'd normally stitch together from half a dozen charts, gathered onto one quiet screen.
Everything else on a coin page reads the world around the trade — funding, open interest, who's leaning long or short. Useful, but it's the paperwork surrounding price. These new dials read price itself: its speed, its stretch, its mood, distilled straight from the candles.
Think of them as a rack of thermometers held against the market. One measures how hot the recent run is, another how far price has wandered from its average, another how hard it's shaking. Different instruments, same patient.
Here's the rule every dial obeys: it reads the temperature, never the direction you should go. A high momentum reading says "this has run hot," not "buy now." A wide volatility reading says "it's shaking," not "brace for a drop." The numbers describe the weather; the decision stays yours.
And because each gauge looks through its own window — some read the last hour, some the last day — they won't always agree. That isn't a glitch. A short-term dial calling "overheated" while a slow one reads "still weak" is simply two honest views of the same bounce, told from different distances.
Every indicator is read from 5-minute candles over the last 24 hours — the same span as the price chart sitting beside it. So the dials breathe in time with what you're actually looking at, instead of reporting on some longer, invisible stretch.
A quiet amount of work went into the part you'll never see: making sure a reading on a $0.50 coin and a $100,000 one mean the same thing, by measuring each move against its own volatility. Forty-two dials, one honest scale — free to open, free to read, like everything else here.