2.1 — Ratiomaster

Modern private trackers have sophisticated anti-cheat systems. If you are reckless, you will be banned.

  • Simulate Real Behavior:

  • Client Versioning:

  • The "Golden Rule" of Anti-Cheat:

  • A mechanic dealing with a persistent lean code (P0171) used Ratiomaster 2.1 to inspect the Mass Air Flow (MAF) sensor. By plotting the ratio of the signal output to the 5V reference line, they discovered a 5% ratio drop at idle—invisible on a standard voltmeter due to a weak 5V reference circuit in the ECU. The fix? A new engine ground strap. ratiomaster 2.1

    The updated graphical user interface (GUI) includes multi-trace oscilloscope views. You can now visualize the "Ratio vs. Time" and "Excitation Voltage vs. Time" simultaneously, allowing for instant detection of intermittent faults.

    Once configured, follow these steps:

  • Uploaded Data: Watch the "Uploaded" counter. It will begin to increment based on your "Network" tab settings.
  • What is happening: RatioMaster is sending HTTP requests to the tracker saying, "I am Client X, I am seeding Torrent Y, and I have uploaded Z amount of data." It is not connecting to peers or transferring actual file pieces.


    Version 2.1 introduces a new averaging algorithm that achieves sub-parts-per-million (sub-PPM) stability. For laboratories calibrating precision shunts or reference resistors, this means your readings remain consistent even across an 8-hour work shift. Simulate Real Behavior:

    A cement plant had inconsistent readings from its belt scales. The run to the PLC was 150 meters, causing voltage drop. Ratiomaster 2.1’s remote ratio-metric mode calculated the weight exclusively via the ratio of the load cell output to the local excitation sense lines, completely eliminating the cable length error. Accuracy returned to 0.02%.