tracking collars vs. GPS
tracking collars vs. GPS
I am looking at getting some tracking collars and was wondering if any of you had some suggestions. Also, I was wondering if anyone has tried out any of the new GPS dog tracking systems, and how they work for ya.
-
pig snatcher
- Silent Mouth

- Posts: 25
- Joined: Fri Aug 31, 2007 12:36 pm
I own a wildlife box and wildlife, quick track and johnson collars and have used them for years with no complaints out of them
I have used the gps system once, we turned out two dogs. The first lost his vest which landed antenna down and was difficult to find, the second lost signal and we were unable to track it untill the collar was brought back to the gps unit. So on that one trip I used it, it was worthless.
I think it is a good idea but needs some modifications. Until then my dogs will run there good old radio collars.
Just my experiances.
I have used the gps system once, we turned out two dogs. The first lost his vest which landed antenna down and was difficult to find, the second lost signal and we were unable to track it untill the collar was brought back to the gps unit. So on that one trip I used it, it was worthless.
I think it is a good idea but needs some modifications. Until then my dogs will run there good old radio collars.
Just my experiances.
- Longspring
- Tight Mouth

- Posts: 121
- Joined: Thu May 22, 2008 2:35 am
- Facebook ID: 0
- Location: Idaho
- dllhoundcompany
- Silent Mouth

- Posts: 55
- Joined: Wed Jun 27, 2007 2:54 pm
- Facebook ID: 0
- Location: RR, NM
Cost vs Reliably
Every thing I have read about GPS is it works in the perfect condition. If your coon/bear hunting well your in tree canopy and will have reception issues. And that is not worth it for me. My brother asked me what the best tracking system for him. Well I told him buy the GPS system from Garmin and it would work for him. Reason he does not hunt coon/bear. He is a Duck hunter and Pheasant and that’s it. His dog is either in the boat with him or walking the fields. The GPS system will work great.
If you have the money go with Marshall you will not regret it. I have it and its perfect. Every hunter has there own personal opinion. Go with one you can afford and works for you.
GPS I think has a few more years before it really ready for the Hound hunter.
Just my 2cents and its been awhile since I check in on this site. Been busy with family.
Looking for guy down south Marty if your around send me a message.
If you have the money go with Marshall you will not regret it. I have it and its perfect. Every hunter has there own personal opinion. Go with one you can afford and works for you.
GPS I think has a few more years before it really ready for the Hound hunter.
Just my 2cents and its been awhile since I check in on this site. Been busy with family.
Looking for guy down south Marty if your around send me a message.
I own a wildlife trx 3 and gps. I still run my wildlife collars for backup. I've had the gps since last November, i've had to use the trx 3 maybe 2 or 3 times to find my dogs when the gps failed. I haven't been able to get signal out to 5 miles with it, the best i got was 3 miles with the roof mount. The good thing about the gps is you know exactly where your dogs are. It saved me a lot of walking a few times, knowing that they crossed a road that i could drive.
- nmplott
- Open Mouth

- Posts: 907
- Joined: Tue Jun 26, 2007 5:42 pm
- Location: The only John Wayne left in this town
- Contact:
when I was going to buy a tracking system I did a lot of research on it. I talked to some of the guys who field tested it, tried ti with a buddy and still did not get the range I thought it would, it only gets a few hundred yards regularly and a few miles once in a great while. My buddy uses it as a locator, he puts a regular radio collar on and that gets him in the right direction and then uses that to pin point the dogs. Some of the testers agreed it was prematuraly placed on the market and it requires some modifications for hound use but works great on rabbit and bird use.
www.arrowbarkennels.com
Home of Plott hounds and American Bulldogs
Home of Plott hounds and American Bulldogs
I have had no complaints with Johnson Telemetry. Good collars, good service.
Have a friend that has a Garmin GPS system. Works good in open type country, sometimes not so great in sharp canyons, could use a little more range.
He modified to a collar with a weight to keep it upright, works pretty well that way. Kinda fun to watch the GPS screen to see exactly where dogs are and where they have been and how far to the tree.
It's a great idea that needs a little more tuning and I'm sure someday it will be a tool to really help find missing hounds faster.
As for now, I'm sticking to my collars and yagi, besides I still love to follow those hounds anyway!
Have a friend that has a Garmin GPS system. Works good in open type country, sometimes not so great in sharp canyons, could use a little more range.
He modified to a collar with a weight to keep it upright, works pretty well that way. Kinda fun to watch the GPS screen to see exactly where dogs are and where they have been and how far to the tree.
It's a great idea that needs a little more tuning and I'm sure someday it will be a tool to really help find missing hounds faster.
As for now, I'm sticking to my collars and yagi, besides I still love to follow those hounds anyway!
-
beaverbill
- Posts: 19
- Joined: Thu Jan 17, 2008 12:34 am
- Facebook ID: 0
- Location: PA Pocono Mountains
-
DesertDweller
- Tight Mouth

- Posts: 103
- Joined: Mon Jun 25, 2007 11:04 pm
- Facebook ID: 0
- Location: Nu Acres, Idaho
-
Mt Goat
- Tight Mouth

- Posts: 122
- Joined: Thu Nov 08, 2007 8:57 pm
- Facebook ID: 0
- Location: Phelan, California
- Contact:
I found on my GPS unit that even if you lose the signal the arrow on the compus still points in the direction the dog is at, even if you lose the map and or yardage indicator. That said right now we have only been using it backed up with Johnson collars
Next month Garmin is suppost to have their new collars out. Heres a link: http://www.lcsupply.com/Brand/Garmin/Ga ... ar-30.html They say the range has been extended to 7 miles. On this other link from an e-mail I got it says if you order the new collar before August 15 you will get a $50 rebate, Link :
http://www.lcsupply.com/images/email/ne ... public.gif
Larry Lowell
Next month Garmin is suppost to have their new collars out. Heres a link: http://www.lcsupply.com/Brand/Garmin/Ga ... ar-30.html They say the range has been extended to 7 miles. On this other link from an e-mail I got it says if you order the new collar before August 15 you will get a $50 rebate, Link :
http://www.lcsupply.com/images/email/ne ... public.gif
Larry Lowell
Larry Lowell
http://www.LowellsGunDogs.com
http://www.PointingDogTrainer.com
"Life's journey is not to arrive at the grave safely in a well preserved
body, but rather to skid in sideways, totally worn out, Shouting !!!
" ...HOLY SHIT....WHAT A RIDE...!!!!!! " ..........-George Carlin-
http://www.LowellsGunDogs.com
http://www.PointingDogTrainer.com
"Life's journey is not to arrive at the grave safely in a well preserved
body, but rather to skid in sideways, totally worn out, Shouting !!!
" ...HOLY SHIT....WHAT A RIDE...!!!!!! " ..........-George Carlin-
-
nightowl24
- Silent Mouth

- Posts: 48
- Joined: Wed Mar 12, 2008 1:08 am
i've hunted with three systems, garmin, innotek, and quicktrack....best radio unit you can buy is quicktrack. great range, you can get a great signal through interference, and you can pick up any freq collar. the customer service is second to none as well. if you go radio i would highly suggest the quicktrack, but it is going to cost you some lettuce.
innotek is nice. if you don't have a lot of money i suggest this one. i use it now and i have tracked my dog a good distance with the crappy innotek collars. if you get any other collar your range is the same as most all the other really expensive units. it isn't the easiest unit to work, but once you work with it you can pinpoint where your dog is extremely easily. i've pinpointed my dog up to 5yds of where he was standing.
garmin is my favorite. we hunted in pretty dense areas and we only lose reception when they go in water, then the come right back up. my buddy made modifications to the old collars and he gets great range out of them. our dogs don't go 5+miles so we don't need a system that goes that far. the information that we get after the hunt helps us out so much that it's hard t go against the garmin. my biggest selling point for the garmin is you know where your dog is and where your dog is going. all our dogs were in but one, so we called him. we knew where he was and could tell when he was coming in and when he was going the wrong way. everytime he went the wrong way we were able to call him to get him back on track. that saved us a TON of time.
basically speaking you only need to know where your dog is when you can't hear him. almost all the units with a really good collar will point you in the direction of your dog. you just need to be able to get in hearing distance, again most all of your units will do this. the bells and whistles are the extras. if i were you would look at your terrian(canyons, flat area, dense trees, etc) then i would look at your dogs(close, med, long) and pick the system that works best for your combination of terrain and your dog's ability. if go radio make sure to get top notch collars and you will be fine. if you go garmin you won't get the range of the radio collars, but you get a lot of extra stuff.
innotek is nice. if you don't have a lot of money i suggest this one. i use it now and i have tracked my dog a good distance with the crappy innotek collars. if you get any other collar your range is the same as most all the other really expensive units. it isn't the easiest unit to work, but once you work with it you can pinpoint where your dog is extremely easily. i've pinpointed my dog up to 5yds of where he was standing.
garmin is my favorite. we hunted in pretty dense areas and we only lose reception when they go in water, then the come right back up. my buddy made modifications to the old collars and he gets great range out of them. our dogs don't go 5+miles so we don't need a system that goes that far. the information that we get after the hunt helps us out so much that it's hard t go against the garmin. my biggest selling point for the garmin is you know where your dog is and where your dog is going. all our dogs were in but one, so we called him. we knew where he was and could tell when he was coming in and when he was going the wrong way. everytime he went the wrong way we were able to call him to get him back on track. that saved us a TON of time.
basically speaking you only need to know where your dog is when you can't hear him. almost all the units with a really good collar will point you in the direction of your dog. you just need to be able to get in hearing distance, again most all of your units will do this. the bells and whistles are the extras. if i were you would look at your terrian(canyons, flat area, dense trees, etc) then i would look at your dogs(close, med, long) and pick the system that works best for your combination of terrain and your dog's ability. if go radio make sure to get top notch collars and you will be fine. if you go garmin you won't get the range of the radio collars, but you get a lot of extra stuff.
-
broncobilly
- Bawl Mouth

- Posts: 360
- Joined: Wed Jul 04, 2007 3:11 am
- Facebook ID: 0
- Location: NE NM
Twice in the last year I have had a dog that couldn't respond, one due to heat stroke, one due to injury. Both times the tracking collar got me in to within 30 or 40 yards, then the bounce got so bad that I couldn't pinpoint it any closer and it ended up taking hours actually finding the dog, even though I was within 40 yards the whole time. When I finally found the heat stroked dog he was still alive, but had already stiffened up and there was no pupil response. I had enough water with me and was able to save him, but I believe that I was with 5 or 10 minutes of loosing one of my best dogs. I didn't find the injured dog till the next day, I also saved him, but it sure could have gone the other way.
Now I use both a radio collar and a garmin. I modified the antenna on the dc 20 and get 3 to 7 miles in most terrain. I am also going to give the dc 30 a try when they come out next month. Since I started using the garmin with the modified antennas, I have not had to use the radio system, but I still have it in case its needed.
Bill
Now I use both a radio collar and a garmin. I modified the antenna on the dc 20 and get 3 to 7 miles in most terrain. I am also going to give the dc 30 a try when they come out next month. Since I started using the garmin with the modified antennas, I have not had to use the radio system, but I still have it in case its needed.
Bill