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ChartUp SOL Volume Bot Packages: A Practical Buyer’s Guide

Choosing a volume-simulation package should begin with the development question, not the largest available number. A one-hour connectivity check and a seven-day analytics observation need different budgets, durations, and execution styles. ChartUp structures its offering around predefined SOL allocations paired with time windows, then provides a dynamic calculator so teams can estimate the activity before they place an order.

The chartup sol volume bot lists packages at 1.5, 3, 4.5, 9, 12, 18, 36, and 54 SOL. Duration choices include one, three, six, twelve, and twenty-four hours, plus three-day and seven-day runs. This range allows a developer to keep a compact validation small or extend a private observation without inventing a custom payment structure.

How allocation and duration work together

Allocation alone does not determine the usefulness of a test. Jito execution is suited to fast confirmation, while organic mode varies timing and trade sizes for longer observation. A project checking whether a new pool route works may prioritize immediacy. A team studying how its dashboards aggregate activity may prefer a slower cadence. The same package can answer very different questions depending on the selected duration and mode.

ChartUp's calculator updates projections using the current price of SOL, but all published outcomes remain estimates. Package calculations use Raydium's cited 0.25% swap fee as a baseline. A venue such as Pumpfun, where the cited fee is 1.25%, consumes more of the same allocation and therefore may generate less volume. Pool conditions, network activity, volatility, and outside trading can create additional differences.

Understanding the published package range

Payment is a one-time on-chain transfer in SOL covering the full package estimate. ChartUp states that it adds no hidden platform swap fee and does not request a wallet connection, private key, or personal information. Paid orders are non-refundable. That makes upfront review especially important: a team should confirm the CA, venue, desired duration, and internal approval before funding the task.

The free trial helps with that review. It requires no payment and supports Raydium, Pumpfun, PumpSwap, and LaunchLab using the team's own contract address. The trial provides a compact view of the setup and control flow rather than a promise about later results. It is a sensible place to verify Telegram access, platform compatibility, reporting, and the team's understanding of automated execution.

Why estimates vary by venue

Once running, an order is not completely locked. ChartUp allows users to pause or resume activity, adjust swap speed, inspect live statistics, and change the contract address while preserving unused budget. Automatic pool-migration detection can redirect execution to the new venue. These features protect the value of a package when development changes, though any altered parameter should be logged for accurate analysis.

Evaluating before committing SOL

The platform is intended solely for private development and testing, not public launches or investor-facing activity. A package should therefore be treated as the cost of a controlled experiment, not as a purchase of public credibility. ChartUp provides a clear menu, flexible controls, and broad Solana venue support; the team must supply a legitimate test objective, realistic expectations, and transparent documentation.

A useful purchasing record should include the package selected, calculator estimate, venue fee assumption, SOL price at approval, and the reason that duration was chosen. Comparing that record with the completed task helps a team refine future budgets without interpreting normal variance as product failure. ChartUp makes the menu straightforward; disciplined estimation keeps the menu aligned with engineering needs.