Expanding Triangle


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Summary of Expanding Triangles

The expanding triangle is a form of triangle characterized by five overlapping waves: A, B, C, D, and E. Unlike a contracting triangle, each wave in an expanding triangle must exceed the end of the preceding same-directional sub-wave, leading to expanding boundary lines. This pattern typically appears before the final wave of a larger degree pattern; for impulses, it represents the fourth wave, and for corrections, it corresponds to the B wave. The sub-waves in an expanding triangle often show a relationship of 1 to 1.236 or 1 to 1.382 to each other.


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