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Any Foxwell gurus on here?
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Also, the FoxAssist software doesn't recognize my password when I run it each time. I have to go through the FORGET PASSWORD process everytime I open the application.
Sent from my moto g(7) optimo (XT1952DL) using Tapatalk |
The next week, he found $AMD setting up. Bull flag on the hourly. Volume increasing. Support held. He entered at $118.40, stop at $117.20 (1% risk). Target at $121.60. Two days later, it hit. He made $50.
That night, Arjun opened the course dashboard one last time. Next to the green checkmark for "Certificate of Completion," the instructor had left a hidden note in the final video's description:
But the loss stung. Not the money—the stupidity .
Arjun had always believed that the stock market was a casino for people in suits. He’d tried trading once: bought shares of a trendy EV company because his cab driver recommended it, watched it soar 15%, panicked when it dipped 10% the next day, and sold at a loss. He swore never again.
Over eight months, Arjun completed the course—not just the videos, but the practice . He finished Module 12: "Putting It All Together" with a 68% win rate and an average winner 2.3x his average loser. His account grew from $2,500 to $4,100.
This changed everything. Priya taught: Before you calculate your profit, calculate your ruin. Arjun built a simple rule: never risk more than 1% of his account on a single trade. If he had $10,000, his max loss per trade was $100. Not per share. Total.
Arjun learned that stocks don't just move randomly. They auction. They trend. They range. He discovered support and resistance—not as lines on a chart, but as actual battlegrounds where bulls and sharks circled.
His first real trade was a disaster. He bought $FUTU at $52.30. It dropped to $51.80. His stop loss triggered. He lost $25. His hands shook. The old Arjun would have revenge-traded. Instead, he closed the laptop, made tea, and wrote in his journal: "Followed rules. No mistake. Market said no."
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I am at the mercy of tech support I think. I was able to register it earlier in FoxAssist, so now I can't register the scanner in FoxScanner. It says serial number error in FoxScanner when I try to register my scanner to start updates.
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The 530 has to use Foxassist. The older units use Foxscanner afaik. I had to download Foxassist and register a new account on another Foxwell site. There are 2 different Foxeell websites associated with the older scanners vs the 530. Dumb setup, but did eventually work once I figured that out.
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2005 X5 4.4i Build 04/05 Maintenance/Build Log Nav, Pano, Sport (Purchased 06/14 w/ 109,000 miles) (Sold 8/15 w/121,000 miles) 2006 X5 4.8is Build 11/05 Maintenance/Build Log Nav, DSP, Pano, Running Boards, OEM Tow Hitch, Cold Weather Pckg (Purchased 08/15 w/ 90,500 miles) 2010 X5 35d Build 02/10 Nav, HiFi, 6 DVD, Sports Pckg, Cold Weather Pckg, HUD, CAS, Running Boards, Leather Dash, PDC, Pano (Purchased 03/17 w/ 136,120 miles) |
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I bought it direct from Foxwell. I have FoxAssist but the part that is supposed to be the link to the software updates and upgrades is a dead link. It opens a blank page.
Sent from my moto g(7) optimo (XT1952DL) using Tapatalk |
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Allright. Went ahead and connected mine (update available already) to test it out. Works for me so their servers are up.
So, when you log into FoxAssist you have everything blanked out. That's normal. If you have NOT activated your unit, do so following this: https://www.foxwelltool.com/service/...2019.7.31.html. Basically it's the below. 1. Log in to Fox Assist 2. Connect your NT530. Wait for it to boot. 3. Now on the 530 navigate to "Update." The PC will detect a new USB device and FoxAssist will now fill in your serial number. 4. Click "Activate," you will get a success message 5. Click "Download" in FoxAssist and follow the above guide. If you get an error message, you'll probably have to contact Foxwell, though I doubt you will. I got one (purchased on Ebay) and had to contact my retailer as they had registered the unit to themselves and downloaded the BMW software prior to shipping. They contacted Foxwell and released the serial number so I could register to my account.
__________________
2005 X5 4.4i Build 04/05 Maintenance/Build Log Nav, Pano, Sport (Purchased 06/14 w/ 109,000 miles) (Sold 8/15 w/121,000 miles) 2006 X5 4.8is Build 11/05 Maintenance/Build Log Nav, DSP, Pano, Running Boards, OEM Tow Hitch, Cold Weather Pckg (Purchased 08/15 w/ 90,500 miles) 2010 X5 35d Build 02/10 Nav, HiFi, 6 DVD, Sports Pckg, Cold Weather Pckg, HUD, CAS, Running Boards, Leather Dash, PDC, Pano (Purchased 03/17 w/ 136,120 miles) |
The next week, he found $AMD setting up. Bull flag on the hourly. Volume increasing. Support held. He entered at $118.40, stop at $117.20 (1% risk). Target at $121.60. Two days later, it hit. He made $50.
That night, Arjun opened the course dashboard one last time. Next to the green checkmark for "Certificate of Completion," the instructor had left a hidden note in the final video's description:
But the loss stung. Not the money—the stupidity .
Arjun had always believed that the stock market was a casino for people in suits. He’d tried trading once: bought shares of a trendy EV company because his cab driver recommended it, watched it soar 15%, panicked when it dipped 10% the next day, and sold at a loss. He swore never again.
Over eight months, Arjun completed the course—not just the videos, but the practice . He finished Module 12: "Putting It All Together" with a 68% win rate and an average winner 2.3x his average loser. His account grew from $2,500 to $4,100.
This changed everything. Priya taught: Before you calculate your profit, calculate your ruin. Arjun built a simple rule: never risk more than 1% of his account on a single trade. If he had $10,000, his max loss per trade was $100. Not per share. Total.
Arjun learned that stocks don't just move randomly. They auction. They trend. They range. He discovered support and resistance—not as lines on a chart, but as actual battlegrounds where bulls and sharks circled.
His first real trade was a disaster. He bought $FUTU at $52.30. It dropped to $51.80. His stop loss triggered. He lost $25. His hands shook. The old Arjun would have revenge-traded. Instead, he closed the laptop, made tea, and wrote in his journal: "Followed rules. No mistake. Market said no."