Locate your vehicles at any time.
"Running the family farm with my husband is a huge operation— we've got fields that stretch out for miles. Keeping track of all our big machinery like tractors used to be a massive headache. With so much land to cover, it was really easy for things to get misplaced or moved without me knowing about it. Too many times I had crews waste half a day just trying to locate a tractor that had been left out in a remote field after the last job. That's why I finally invested in a GPS asset tracking system for all our major farm equipment. Now I can just pull up the app on my phone and immediately see the location of every tractor. No more wasted time and money spent hunting for lost equipment!”
“As a premium catering company, our reputation is everything. Clients pay top dollar for our services because they expect the absolute best - delicious food and perfect timing. The last thing I want is for one of my catering vans to get delayed on the way to an event. In this business, being even 15 minutes late is unacceptable. It can throw off the entire schedule for setting up, prepping food, and serving guests on time. That's why I started using GPS tracking on all my catering vans, to know exactly where every van is at. This allows me to get ahead of the situation and provide accurate ETAs to clients wondering when our vans will arrive. Transparency like that goes a long way in living up to our premium brand promise.”
"In the pest control business, you unfortunately run into situations where customers claim you never showed up to provide the service they paid for. Having my field techs' word go up against the customer's can open up a whole mess of lies versus they-said situations. I turned to GPS tracking to monitor my fleet of service vehicles so whenever one of our pest control trucks arrives at a property, the tracking device broadcasts that location data and time-stamps it. I've got a digital record showing exactly when we were on-site and for how long we were there. If a customer tries disputing whether we sprayed their property or not, I can simply pull up the vehicle's tracking data for that stop. The mapping software shows me the truck's arrival time, departure time, and total time on the premises. Seeing is believing - I can show them verifiable evidence we were there as expected."
Easy to plug in to your vehicle, this game-changing technology pays for itself quickly. Regain control of your vehicle fleet today!
Then monthly subscription of $14.95/month for app
(Cancel anytime)
Yes, you pay for your device upfront ($219.95 $129.95) . Then there is a $14.95 monthly fee for the app. Cancel anytime.
Our GPS Tracking Locator is OBD, which stands for On-Board Diagnostics. This means the device plugs directly into a vehicle's OBD-II port, typically located under the dashboard.
The OBD-II port is a standardized computer diagnostic port that has been mandatory in all vehicles sold in the United States since 1996. It provides access to the vehicle's computer system and data from various sensors and modules. By connecting to the port, the tracking device can receive power from the vehicle and also read vehicle data like:
Real-time GPS location
Vehicle speed
Engine diagnostics
Idling time
Miles driven
This allows the tracking device to monitor and transmit detailed data about the vehicle's location, movement, and operation to the fleet tracking software/app in real-time.
Using the OBD port makes installing vehicle tracking devices very straightforward - they are simply plugged in with no wiring or complicated setup required. It's a "plug and play" solution versus having to hardwire tracking devices.
Yes, the device plugs directly into a vehicle's OBD-II port, typically located under the dashboard.
Sometimes if you take the vehicle to the mechanic, they might uninstall it...in which case you need to reinstall it.
It's around the size of a tennis ball—the GPS tracker measures 1.85 x 2.6 x 1.1 inches (47 x 67 x 28 mm) and weighs 1.75 oz (50 g).
The GPS tracker supports SMS, UDP Packet Data, and TCP for data transmission.
The GPS tracker supports various cellular frequencies, including LTE CAT-1 1900 MHz (B2), AWS 1700 MHz (B4), and 700 MHz (B12) for North American Variant I, and LTE CAT-1 AWS 1700 MHz (B4) and 700 MHz (B13) for North American Variant II.
The GPS tracker offers an OBD-II Interface, 2-wire TTL Serial Port, Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE), Status LEDs (OBD, GPS, Cellular), an Integrated Buzzer, and a Built-in Accelerometer.
The GPS tracker features internal GPS and cellular antennas, as well as internal 2FF Sim Access
The GPS tracker includes PULS™ for remote monitoring, management, firmware upgrades, configuration, and troubleshooting. It also supports CTC for device data streaming via RESTful APIs and Edge Intelligence with PEG™.
The GPS tracker supports GPS, GLONASS, and SBAS Engine (WAAS, EGNOS, MSAS, GAGAN) constellations, with 55 channels and tracking sensitivity of -167 dBm.
The GPS tracker provides location accuracy of approximately 2.0 meters CEP Open Sky (GPS SBAS 24 hours static) with up to 4Hz location update rate and AGPS location assistance capability.
The GPS tracker operates on 12/24 VDC vehicle systems, with typical power consumption ranging from 2mA (deep sleep) to 40mA (active tracking with GPS and cellular enabled). It also includes a lithium-ion battery pack with a capacity of 180 mAH.
The GPS tracker measures 1.85 x 2.6 x 1.1 inches (47 x 67 x 28 mm) and weighs 1.75 oz (50 g). It operates within a temperature range of -30°C to +60°C (connected to primary power) and -20°C to +60°C (operating on battery), with humidity tolerance up to 85% RH at 50°C non-condensing. It also meets shock and vibration standards per U.S. Military Standards 202G, 810F; SAEJ1455 and ESD standard IEC 61000-4-2 (4KV Test).