Building a proxy pool, what actually works?

Building a proxy pool, what actually works?

Outpost

New member
so i posted about proxy pools before, but honestly been diving deeper lately and wanted to break down what ive found so far without the fluff. i tried combining residential, datacenter, and mobile proxies from different providers and honestly the results are kinda all over the place. some cheap residential proxies from one provider get me banned super quick on some sites but hold up well on others. datacenter proxies are cheap and fast but super obvious so they get flagged instantly unless i rotate them super frequently. mobile proxies? they seem promising but damn they're costly and sometimes still get caught especially on anti-bot measures. i built my own pool with a mix of a few providers but the key seems to be rotation frequency and fingerprint masking. some providers give you a ton of IPs but their rotators are slow or unreliable so i end up with IP leaks or detection. others have solid API setups but the proxies are low quality. imho, you gotta test each provider for your use case and don't just buy blindly, especially if scraping or anti-detection is your goal. also, adding in some custom user-agent and fingerprint spoofing seems to boost success rate but that's a whole other rabbit hole. anyone here actually built a real scalable pool that works across different use cases? i mean not just buy cheap proxies but really dialed in their setup?
 
tbh if the proxies are low quality even with a good API setup you're still gonna have issues, API won't fix crappy IPs.
 
From my experience, no matter how good your rotation or fingerprint masking is, if the IPs are trash, you're still gonna get burned. You need a solid base of quality IPs first, then mess around with the setup. Otherwise, lol, it's just spinning your wheels.
 
if you want a real scalable pool that works, start with legit proxies from a trusted provider and test, test, test. i built my own pool years ago and learned the hard way that no amount of rotation or fingerprint masking saves garbage IPs. cheap proxies are just a waste of time if you really wanna scale without getting banned all the time.
 
bruh, honestly I think you might be overthinking it a bit. I've built pools with random cheap proxies and still got decent results if I focused on good rotation and fingerprinting. sometimes quality proxies just aren't worth the hassle if you're doing small scale stuff. ymmv tho.
 
Been doing this 3 years, and honestly, the only thing that works is testing and switching often. I remember spending ages on one proxy provider only to find out it was dead weight after a few days. Nothing really sticks, you gotta keep trying and adapt.
 
You ever tried automating the testing process? rn, switching proxies often is key but keeping a steady hand on the quality is tricky.
 
Building a proxy pool, what actually works? Yep exactly, testing is king. I found that rotating every 15-20 mins and maintaining a 90% live rate with tools like ProxyRack or BrightData saves a lot of headaches. Keep the quality high but don't get too attached to any single provider
 
bruh, totally agree testing and switching is the only real way. no point sticking with dead proxies. gotta stay on top of it.
 
Different angle: besides testing and rotating, I found that setting up a good backend with automatic health checks helps keep the pool fresh. If you're maintaining a 90% live rate, you might wanna aim for even higher and discard proxies under 80% quickly. ymmv
 
appreciate the tips fam, always gotta keep switching and testing, thats the only way to find what works long term imho. automating the testing process is a good shout too, less manual work and can keep the pool fresh. rotating every 15-20 mins sounds about right, gotta keep those proxies alive and avoid dead weight.
 
Last month I tried setting up a proxy pool and learned that mixing residential and data center proxies with regular rotation is more effective than relying on just one type.
 
last month I experimented with building a proxy pool and found that sticking to a mix of residential and mobile proxies kinda helps keep the success rate higher. Rotating them often and testing for quality is key, otherwise you just waste time. Honestly, the biggest thing is to keep monitoring and swapping out bad proxies fast.
 
just my 2 cents, tried a proxy pool last week and found mixing residential with some mobile proxies kept things smooth. rotating a lot and testing new ones quick helped me avoid bans. kinda messy but worked better than just one type
 
different angle: I tried mixing residential and data center proxies and it was a nightmare, got loads of slow responses and bans. think sometimes just sticking with one type and rotating fast (like every 5-10 mins) actually works better for stability. imo, less chaos, more control.
 
are you sure building a proxy pool is about what "actually works" or is it more about what works for your specific use case? It seems like everyone's experimenting but there's no one-size-fits-all. Have you tried sticking to just one proxy type and rotating within that?
 
Bruh, honestly most of the success comes down to testing and adjusting fast. If you go too broad with proxies, you get slow, bans, or both. Focus on quality and rotation speed imo.
 
last month i tried building a proxy pool and kept forgetting to actually test the proxies before adding them. always better to run a quick check first, saves time and avoids banning your whole pool later.
 
Been doing this 3 years and honestly, I keep it simple, just rotate fresh proxies and test 'em daily. Do you guys run into issues with proxies getting blocked fast or is it more about the testing phase?
 
Back
Top