10 Tips and Tricks for Private BitTorrent Sites
The first thing to notice when you join a private BitTorrent site is the eye-popping quality of the torrents. Each one is carefully culled, hand-picked through a strict moderation process. However, before you start hammering away on that download link - here are a few things you need to know.
On private torrent sites, everything revolves around ratios. A 1:1 ratio (or 1.0) means that you’ve downloaded exactly the same amount of data as you’ve uploaded. Thus a 0.80 ratio indicates that you’ve uploaded less than you’ve downloaded, which is hurtful to the health of the torrent. Inversely, a 3.0 ratio means you’ve uploaded 3 times more data than you’ve downloaded. Strive to achieve at least a 1.0 ratio - each site will have specific consequences for members who maintain a ratio of less than this. Attain a ratio over 1.0 and the rewards shall follow you into the P2P afterlife.
If you’re brand-new to a private site, it will be difficult in the beginning to acquire a 1.0 ratio. Luckily, users are given a ‘grace’ period to achieve this. Since there are so many more seeds than leechers (a total flip-flop from public BT sites), it becomes harder to upload to others - due to the fact that there are fewer people to share with.
So why go through all the trouble to keep an honest ratio? Because deep down, you’re an upstanding denizen of file-sharing society! Aside from that shameless pat-on-the-back, good ratios offer many perks, including an upgraded account on the tracker (i.e. VIP status), higher download speeds, free “invites” for your friends, and no waiting periods associated with accounts in arrears.
Here are Ten Tips to get your ratio in top-shape as fast as possible:
1. Start out with Smaller Files
Initially, opt for smaller (i.e. under 1 GB) files for downloading. This gives you a greater chance of someone coming along after you and downloading the same torrent (and you’ll be able to upload to them). Obviously a 700MB movie file will be more appealing to other site members than a 30GB ‘Blu-Ray’ rip.
2. Jump on the ‘Newly Released’ torrents
This is a great tip for increasing your ratio in a hurry. Camp out in your favorite private BT site, and refresh the torrent listings frequently. Newly added entries will have many more leechers than seeds, so you’ll be able to share (upload) more data. To maximize this tip, select smaller files - the “TV Episode” category works great for this.
3. Select Files that have a High ‘L’ or upload number
This is important. When selecting torrents, base your initial selections on a high number of leechers (the more, the better). This will ensure you have many avenues to upload to during (and after) the transfer. When starting out on a new private BT site, we would even go so far as to say that you should download torrents that you don’t want - just start grabbing torrents that have lots of leechers. Once your ratio get over the 1:1 (1.0) mark, delete them.
TIP: If one of your seeding torrents remains popular, leave it running in µtorrent permanently. This will always help to boost your upload ratio.
4. Avoid ‘Zero-Leech’ torrents
When you’re new to a private site, steer clear of the ‘zero-leech’ torrents - it is impossible to increase your share ratio when there are no other downloaders. When viewing a list of torrents, look for the “Leecher” column (or just “L”) and avoid anything that has a zero ( “0″ ) in it. After your account ratio has become relatively stable, now is the time to snag whatever you want.
5. Leave some tasks running in uTorrent
After the completed download of a torrent, leave the task running (as a seed) in µtorrent to increase your upload statistics. Don’t delete (or move) the files of a running task! You can, however, extract (unRAR) the files, or copy the files from one place to the next. In the event of a movie/video file - you’ll be able to “burn” or “extract” the *.avi file (or even play it on the PC) without affecting the seeding torrent.
TIP: Always keep a few things running as ’seeds’ in your BT client. If you notice that they aren’t uploading, replace them with newer ones.
6. Go for the ‘Freebie’ downloads
Many private sites will offer “free” torrents that won’t count against your download statistics (thus, your ratio will remain unchanged). Grab these freebies - especially when searching for torrents on a new account.
7. Use ‘Credits’ to purchase…
A popular feature among superior private BitTorrent sites is the addition of a ‘credits’ feature for account holders. Credits can be used to ‘purchase’ VIP status, increased sharing ratios and other perks. Not all sites are the same, but some credits can be acquired just from staying active in their IRC channel, or from just having the torrents available for download in your BT client.
8. Do NOT try to ‘cheat’ the Private Trackers
There are a variety of ratio cheating tips available out there, but don’t be tempted. Trackers are fairly sophisticated and ever-evolving. If you get caught cheating, you won’t even be warned - it’s a permanent ban for you and bye-bye for good.
9. Set a proper Upload Limit
Setting a proper upload limit in the BT client makes all the difference! You’ll want to supply a high enough limit to maximize uploading, but not have it eat into your download bandwidth. The general rule is to set it at 80 - 85% of your upload limit. To figure this out, visit www.speedtest.net and conduct the simple test. Results are shown in kilobits, so divide the result by 1/8 and then multiply that by 0.85. This will give you the proper number in KB/s (KiloBytes).
In µtorrent, go to OPTIONS > Preferences… > Connection and enter your upload rate. Click “Apply” and then “OK” to save the changes. While your in that same ’settings’ page, make sure to use a port number from the good list (e.g. 49152 - 65535).

10. And if all else fails…donate
Most sites allow for monetary contributions to keep up with the server costs. If you enjoy a particular site immensely but cannot seem to be able to approach a decent sharing ratio (due to turning off your computer at night, going to work, or sharing your computer with your kids, wife, husband or siblings), think about donating. In most cases even a not-so-generous gratuity will robustly affect your account status - plus you’ll feel good about helping out the BitTorrent community.
Other Tips - Follow ‘The Rules’
Yeah, we know: you hate rules! That’s why you probably moved out of your parents’ basement. Rules are probably why some turned to P2P.
Nevertheless, rules are an important aspect to private BT sites - they ensure healthy torrents and blazing-fast download speeds for all. Each site will have their “rules” posted - the link is usually not hard to find. Below are some general rules / tips that pertain to any private BitTorrent site:
Use an ‘Accepted’ BitTorrent client
Not all private trackers are the same - and each one has different rules in regards to which BitTorrent client is on the “allowable” list. Most sites recommend µtorrent, but only specific versions (or builds) of it. If you stick with v1.6.1 or the latest version v1.7.7 (recommended), you can’t go wrong with ANY private site (avoid any versions in between these numbers). And do not use BitComet on private trackers.
Proper BitTorrent client configuration:
Many trackers recommend that you disable DHT and Peer Exchange (PEX) in your BT client’s settings. To do this in µtorrent, go to OPTIONS > Preferences… > and select the BitTorrent tab. Remove the three checkmarks that pertain to DHT and PEX (see image below):

Do not ‘Hit & Run’ a Private BT site:
A ‘Hit & Run’ (or H&R) is when someone joins a private tracker, and downloads as much as they can before making off without uploading to a proper ratio. While this practice is frowned upon even on public sites such as mininova.org, it is deplorable to private sites. This can (and sometimes will) lead to your IP address being banned from the site - forever.
Stick within these guidelines for HAPPY Torrenting!
Previously: BitTorrent Sites Show Explosive Growth
Next: ‘Good’ Pirates Help Companies Sell More Products

198 Responses (Add yours or TrackBack)
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a tutorial as a news item? must be cucumber time…
I don’t understand why you have to disable the DHT. I’ve never had problems with my ratio because of the DHT. The torrents on private trackers have DHT disabled. In addition, if you want to download an external torrent you might find out that without DHT enabled you won’t be able to connect to some peers.
Basically pay to leech your way to private torrent site heaven.
Most sites have their own, equivalent guides anyway.
Slow news day, huh? =]
(All good info, tho’…)
Happy Easter………………..
I dont like the point that if else.. donate… Thats not what the private torrent sites are about.. Donate if you like the project, never donate if you must.. This just makes private torrent sites the same as public sites.. Crappy users and terible community. Most of the guide rules are really simple and understanding, so thats good. However, is partial seeding illegal somewhere so its not mentioned? Thats the biggest trick of private sites. A REAL ratio booster. :)
I agree, if all else fails, DO NOT DONATE.
Donating is meant for the upkeep of the site. We all know that this is not always the case with private trackers.
If you’re going to donate, do it because you like the site and want to help, not because you want ratio credit.
good advice
Why can you not use Bitcomet?
of course, if you have 300K down and 40K up, and you download 24/7 — it is physically impossible to keep a 1:1 ratio!
Hell — If your download is a bazillion megs a second, but your upload is only 192kbps — you’re never going to be able to download faster than 192kbps without hurting your ratio, and having to seed back.
Of course, seeding back NEVER happens at maximum upload rate.
If you download a file in a day, expect to have to seed it for at least 10.
If you do this every day, expect your harddrive to fill up with all the files you are still seeding.
This guide is good, but completely unrealistic. If you want to download a dvd’s worth of data, every day — you are NOT going to be able to keep a 1.0 ratio.
Basically, sites that require 1.0 per person are unrealistic dickheads. There are some people who only download 1 or 2 files a week, then seed it forever. These are the ones who make it possible for others to scrape by with lower than 1.0 ratio. Trackers don’t consider this.
Trackers also don’t give you a ratio bonus for seeding a file if nobody else is downloading — which is wrong.
If I’m the last seeder on a torrent, I’m not going to get any upload credit, as there are no leechers. I leave.
If they were to give me a “passing the torch” credit for keeping the torrent alive (say, 2% of the total torrent size per day), then I would stay on the torrent.
2 months later, someone might come along, and be able to download it — because the ratio bonuses let me keep seeding it for credit.
But currently? There’s no encouragement like this. Thus, every torrent eventually dies. I’ve missed things simply because the torrent died within 2 weeks, and I came in within 3 weeks.
The bittorrent tracker paradigm is still FAR from perfect.
Anon -> Many private sites don’t allow that client because it is widely used as a cheat client ..
normaly it’s only Utorrent and maby Azureus and some linux clients ..
Guess nothings happening in the world of file-sharing then…
To C:
Thanks, never knew that.
Nice guide for n00bs, I would highly suggest #2.
I’ve found that the quickest way to build a little buffer is to be one of the first leechers on a popular new torrent. That alone can give you several GB buffers in a day.
I’m happy with mininova. I used to use what.cd (and oink.cd before that) but I have such a low upload speed (1meg compared to 24meg download) that i was continually downloading then seeding new stuff i didn’t want or need.
Private sites are too much effort. Stick to reputable uploaders like skirgsk, FXG, FXM, aXXo, dopeman and skullpatra on mininova, and you’re sure of quality and good speeds. I always seed these up to 2.5 because I repect them.
[quote comment="316985"]Why can you not use Bitcomet?[/quote]
It cheats the system, and goes against the “give and ye shall recieve” motto of bittorrent by trying in everyway possible to download as quickly as possible while uploading the absolute minimum, thus slowing the speed of the swarm. It also doesn’t superseed properly, resulting in corrupted uploads and hashfails .For these reason most private sites don’t allow it.
ADD 1.) parial downloading:
Randomly select to download only about 10-20% of files (if possible) in bigger torrent, that is leeched heavily but you dont want to download. You can get very good ratio then.
ADD 1.) partial seeding:
Randomly select to download only about 10-20% of files (if possible) in bigger torrent, that is leeched heavily but you dont want to download. You can get very good ratio then.
[quote comment="317012"]I’m happy with mininova.[/quote]
you have low standards. mininova is mostly slow as shit. everyone i know only seeds at 1k/s to public trackers and hits and runs everything. there’s no incentive at public trackers to seed. my bandwidth is too precious to waste on shit like TPB and sumo, i have to look after my private sites, and so does everyone else, which is why private sites are 10×10^10 times better.
Ah 1:1 Ratios. A retarded idealistic concept based upon pyramid scheme.
@18
Good thing private sites don’t require anything close to a 1:1 ratio to keep a basic account active then, right?
You forgot a very important tip to improve ratio on private trackers:
Upload your own stuff (according to the rules!)
Imo it’s the best way to improve someones ratio on private trackers :f
Not all private trackers allow utorrent 1.6.1
what’s a good private torrent server because i want to join!!!!
What a lame article. There are more clients than just utorrent. And disabling DHT and PEX? Do you know how private torrents work? Apparently not.
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