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Author Topic: Updated Opinions of DC30?  (Read 7819 times)
Noah
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« on: October 20, 2008, 08:10:00 am »

So, what's the deal?  Everybody's had a chance to use em for a while...
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Noah Metzger 352 316 8005
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« Reply #1 on: January 19, 2009, 08:58:49 am »

So, what's the deal?  Everybody's had a chance to use em for a while...

I have had the Astro system with 3 DC20 collars for over a year and added the new DC30s and the extended range receiver antenna last month.  Just got back from a hard long hog hunt. lost a dog, got it back ,etc. so I am ready to comment.  Here are my views pasted from another post:

In Louisiana, in swamp, forests, the range is only about 20% better than the old DC-20s.  That is about 1 mile to 1.5 miles max for the newer DC-30.  With Garmin's new extended range accessory antennas for your receiver, it doubles your range to about 2-3 miles on the average.  In no way can you get the range of any regular radio telemetry collars, which is 5 to 7 miles in this part of the country.  I also noticed in the hills of Mississippi, the Garmin system loses the signal immediately when the dogs go into a canyon or over a hill (that is puts solid ground between you and them) even 100 yards away, contrast that with a Wildlife Materials system with extended range collars, the signal bends around the terrain and you still get a weak but very useful signal 2-3 miles away from dogs deep in canyon bottoms.

Durabilty is better than the old DC-20, but not as good as any regular radio collar.  The Garmins use screws with rubber gaskets to water proof.  I already lost one of my old DC20's to water intrusion and a second DC20 is acting up, so I suspect it too has water issues.  Unfortunately, Garmin is still using the rubber gaskets with four screws on the DC20s.  They need to look at the other radio collars, there is a reason they imbed everything in epoxy. 

In a few years Garmin may get it right.  But for now, any other telemetry system has at least , 3 times the range, worked better in hills, makes tougher more water proof collars, and has much better battery life in the event you lose a dog.

In hind sight, instead of buying an Astro with 3 DC-20s, then 3 more DC-30s and an extended range receiver antenna, I should have bought a regular tracking system such as Marshall or Wildlife system and than bought a Garmin 60cxs GPS on the side.  Probably would have spent the same and been happier.
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« Reply #2 on: January 19, 2009, 09:11:13 am »

Goatcher,

     Thanks for posting, that is the type of feedback that Garmin should be listening too when designing their next generation collars.  I am still in that middle ground where I think the technology is neat as can be, but I am not yet confident enough to rely on their system alone.  What works great for us, is that one of our hunting buds runs Garmin on a couple dogs, and the rest run radio. The Garmin will get us to a bay quicker than the radio, but if a dog happens to get in a rare situation that it is out of the Garmin range, we have the ability to track and recover the dog.
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« Reply #3 on: January 19, 2009, 03:24:23 pm »

Noah,

I've been using the Astro unti and 2 dc-30 units for two months now.  To date, I have yet to have my first issue so for now I think they are a keeper.  After a couple more months I'll be in a place to be more confident with that answer.

I can tell you this much, the technology is awesome.  No more guess work about where the dogs are, what they are doing, and if they are together.  This past weekend, both curs took off into the woods after only roading about 5 minutes from the truck.  After a bit I reached into the saddle bag and pulled out the astro unit to see what was up.  I see them at 502 yards, then 569, yards, then 655 yards, then 700 something..... I have my unit set to refresh every 5 seconds so you can tell these dogs are moving out when the yardage is changing that quick in thick cover.  And on top of that I can tell the little bmc is about 30-40 yards behind the lacy.  Just from seeing that I knew they were not chasing scent, they were chasing fur and afterburners were on.   On top of that, I couldn't hear the bay but I knew the second it happened....the yardage didn't move but 15 yards over about a 30 second period and the collars were just about on top of each other.  As soon as I saw that, we knew were in business.
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« Reply #4 on: January 22, 2009, 01:58:43 pm »

Ive owned my Garmin Astro with DC-30 collars for over a month now and have had the same experiences as Cull Buck after 8 good hunts.
I have no complaints so far and am tickled to death with it! I get a real kick out of watching it all happen on the little monitor when I cant see or hear my dogs! I am also blown away with the data this unit collects one each individual dog as well as the handler.
The furthest my dogs have gotten from me on a bay so far is only 2.6 miles but in thick, thick timber and brush and I never lost comms with them. So far so good.
It has changed the way I hunt and allows me to make better decisions when my dogs separate on differnet hogs.
I will stick with it until something better comes along..................if something better comes along!
That being said just give me another month. I may not have a single thing good to say about it! lol.
« Last Edit: January 22, 2009, 02:02:09 pm by BoarNinja » Logged

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« Reply #5 on: January 25, 2009, 05:37:42 pm »

i love mine havent lost too much sig yet have watched the dogs in times we wouldnt even know they were bayed up before down in creeks and stuff, its helped us alot
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kevin
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« Reply #6 on: January 26, 2009, 01:09:24 pm »

Junk.  Central Oklahoma rolling hills they got about 3/4 of a mile range.  Lost one dog for an hour while out of range.  Also out of 3 new dc30's only one was still working after the hunt was through.  They no longer had gps reception so they where nothing more than a blinking red light on a collar.
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craig
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« Reply #7 on: January 26, 2009, 01:20:58 pm »

kevin
just curious about how long you have had your garmin, and what the wheather conditions where on your hunt?

                             craig
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« Reply #8 on: January 26, 2009, 08:12:40 pm »

I got mine in Dec. or Jan. of last year.  The DC20 collars broke for th last time roughly 4~6 months later.  The dc30's used this weekend belong to Kevin Oneal.
 The weather was windy and chilly with mostly clear skies.  The clouds that were there were the high thin clouds. The Gps reception loss was something loose or not functioning correctly inside the collar.  They build the collars strong enough to withstand a dog going to retreive the newspaper and that is about it.
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Cull Buck
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« Reply #9 on: February 13, 2009, 07:50:52 am »

Kevin,

I'd be willing to buy that junky Astro unit off your hands if your looking to get rid of it.  I know a person that lost his hand held unit last weekend. Sad
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« Reply #10 on: February 13, 2009, 10:16:21 am »

 I think I know of that same guy.  I'm the one that said I lost mine but I found it. 
I sold mine with one broke collar and one working collar to someone off of here for $200about 2 weeks ago.  If I would have still had it the forest I would have given it to him.  I know how it feels to lose something you need.
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« Reply #11 on: March 19, 2009, 10:34:21 pm »

Got to hunt with one this weekend. Very handy. Cuts out the guesswork. Gonna trade my Tracker in on one soon hopefully. Only thing I didn't like was the collar material. Not that there is anything wrong with it. I just like the solid collars.
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« Reply #12 on: April 09, 2009, 11:30:59 am »

Love it.  We run 5 collars at one time and have had very few problems.  The only problem we have had is when the frequency #'s are too close together, one might sometimes lose signal.  We hunt in East Texas, in thick terrain and have no problems tracking our dogs.  We have tracked up to 2.6 miles, and thats the fartherest our dogs have gotten out.  This system has probably saved the lives of several of our dogs because we can get to them ASAP.
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Lyssy
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« Reply #13 on: April 21, 2009, 10:32:25 am »

The DC 30's are the best product to hit the stores lately. We run 6-10 collars at a time and they have not faild yet. Sometimes one of them turns of after using a shock collar on the dog, but turn it back on and it runs like new. We had one dog run a hog across a hiway and he got hit by a car, and the collar had a few scuff marks on it but was still on when we found the dog and still wrks as if just was pulled out of the box. The next addition to my setup is to get the long ranged antena for the GPS unit, and some how figure out how to put the tracking collar wire into the biothane collars or a cut collar.
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« Reply #14 on: April 21, 2009, 09:46:41 pm »

like i talk with some guys from meridian the man who takes a gps colar and puts a radio tracker in it to together same size will be rich, play with your dogs on the gps and wen loose one pull out the radio tracker
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« Reply #15 on: April 24, 2009, 08:30:51 am »

I would not trade it. Run it on every hunt. I get a quick true look at the dogs when time is of an essence. I have had one collar go out. Not sure why, but took it back to the store and they gave me a new one.  I was back to hunting. Have the Extended Antenna...... put a collar on my mirror of my truck drove 7.9 miles away and it never lost me.
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« Reply #16 on: May 03, 2009, 03:52:15 pm »

I've had my Astro and DC30 collars for about 3 months so far haven't had any problems with it. I did have to get a extended range antenna,without it about  3/4 mile was tops. Now I've got a little over 2 miles .I still use quik trac collars and reciever on the dogs just in case.I got the unit and the antenna mounted on my 4 wheeler so its almost non stop,sure changed the way I hunt.
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« Reply #17 on: May 06, 2009, 07:07:13 pm »

Innotec out of Australia already has a GPS/Radio collar that is getting good reviews. I would like to see that product in the US.
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buddylee
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« Reply #18 on: May 18, 2009, 08:59:08 am »

How does it function in thick timber with a high canopy ?
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« Reply #19 on: May 18, 2009, 09:16:56 am »

i love my DC30 collars. They get about half a mile in the deep valleys where i hunt in Palo Pinto but about 3 miles in flat farm land without the extended collar
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