T13G: Personal 3G GPS Tracker With 3000mAh Rechargeable Battery
TK13G is a wcdma 3G GPS tracker, portable design with 5000mAh rechargeable & removable battery. USA, Canada, Mexico, and Australia operators will stop of 2G service at the end of 2016, therefore, 3G gps tracker is the future.
Product High Lights:
1)Big battery 5000mAh,can last for more than 400 days;
2)Clip design,could hang on trousers;
3)Built in motion sensor/vibration sensor/compact sensor,it will send alert via sms or call;
4)Easy gsm sms tracking with street name in sms text;
5)Free web based tracking platform supporting.
6)New added SOS emergency help button.
Main Features:
Clip style for outdoor worker
5000mAh Lithium-ion battery with industry standard
Instant call alert for anti-theft when detect the vehicle moved
GSM 850/900/1800/1900 Quad-band
Build-in GPS/GPRS and Antenna
Web based Real-time tracking and replay or locate via SMS
Built-in watchdog CPU to avoid system crash
Built-in motion sensor to save power
Hardware Specifications:
Storage Temp: -40 to 85°C
Operating Temp: -10 to 55°C
GPS: U-BLOX G6010-ST, 50 channel
Antennae: Internal
Frequency: L1 1575.42 MHz
Position Accuracy: <5m
Sensitivity:
Tracking: –161 dBm
Cold starts: –148 dBm
Hot starts: –156 dBm
Cold start: <27s
Warm Start: <5s
Hot Start: 1s
A-GPS: AssistNow Online and AssistNow Offline services,
OMA SUPL compliant
GPRS: MTK 626D
Quad band; 850/900/1800/1900 MHz
GPRS Class 12
Antennae: Internal
Power: Rechargeable, 5000 mAh, Lithium-Ion Battery
Built-in Vibration/motion sensing
Storage Temp: -40 to 85°C
Operating Temp: -10 to 55°C
GPS: U-BLOX G6010-ST, 50 channel
Antennae: Internal
Frequency: L1 1575.42 MHz
Position Accuracy: <5m
Sensitivity:
Tracking: –161 dBm
Cold starts: –148 dBm
Hot starts: –156 dBm
Cold start: <27s
Warm Start: <5s
Hot Start: 1s
A-GPS: AssistNow Online and AssistNow Offline services,
OMA SUPL compliant
GPRS: MTK 626D
Quad band; 850/900/1800/1900 MHz
GPRS Class 12
Antennae: Internal
Power: Rechargeable, 5000 mAh, Lithium-Ion Battery
Built-in Vibration/motion sensing