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Trackers in company vehicles
locosaki - 27/11/10 at 05:51 PM

Quick technical question here.

How would you kill the power to a tracker in a works van so that it would not read ?

Is it a simple as pulling the fuse ?


BenB - 27/11/10 at 05:54 PM

I imagine they have battery back-up (certainly the anti-theft trackers do). And pulling the power might well activate an alarm. You could try degausing it@?


loggyboy - 27/11/10 at 06:00 PM

They will know, and then you'l get repremanded/sacked.
Just dont drive like a twat or drive where/when you shouldnt.


fesycresy - 27/11/10 at 06:08 PM

We had a guy tampering with his tracker, they were too easy to access. So we complained to the tracker company and they came out and re-installed it in the depths behind the dash!

I assume he just picked up a local permanent 12v, so unless you cut the wire / pull the tracker fuse, I can't see how you would do it.

Loop the feed to the dash with a toggle switch? But when the system shows repeat power failures and the tracker company investigates, you're fuct.


gavin174 - 27/11/10 at 06:11 PM

a tracker is there so the vehicle can be recovered if stolen..

it cannot be used to momitor your movements..

unless you sign to say it can.

invassion of privacy etc etc..

european court and all that...


jacko - 27/11/10 at 06:13 PM

A little tip if you do stop it working you MUST start it again very very close to where you stopped it
don't ask how i know a tracker is there so the vehicle can be recovered if stolen..

it cannot be used to momitor your movements..

unless you sign to say it can.

invassion of privacy etc etc..

european court and all that...

I believe this is right
[Edited on 27/11/10 by jacko]

[Edited on 27/11/10 by jacko]


MkIndy7 - 27/11/10 at 06:16 PM

I'd say there really not worth tampering with but..

There is atleast a 12v permenant feed to the tracker, and an ignition live aswell.
The permenant 12v feed keeps the internal rechargable battery charged, so if its disconected and the tracker is not removed it logs everywhere its been until its connected up again (possibly using GSM mobile technology rather than the GPS aerial)

So basically, you'd have to remove the tracker completely and leave it onsite or at home when your doing something you shouldn't be, it would be no good just removing the fuse or the ignition live.

Aparently people have covered or removed the GPS aerial so it appears theres a fault and out work really arent arsed to retrieve the trackers, but I bet where you've been imbetween is stil logged by the GSM side of it, if they've paid for that aswell.

Just for reference ours log every 2 mins when the engines running.

Hmm the last bit about invasion of privacy etc is interesting weather it stands when its their Vehicle, we've never been asked or made to sign anything they just steamrollerd em in 1 day, I suppose you've nothing to hide if their used sensibly.


UncleFista - 27/11/10 at 06:22 PM

GPS/cell phone blockers are readily available, they just plug into the 12v cigarette lighter socket (they're not much bigger than a lighter).

[Edited on 27/11/10 by UncleFista]


locosaki - 27/11/10 at 06:35 PM

GPS/Cell phone blocker.

Now I'm interested, So this would work with a tracker then ?

Never knew so a thing existed !


UncleFista - 27/11/10 at 06:53 PM

I have a hand-held cell phone blocker, it doesn't get used very often, but when it does it works great
Last time we had a family meal at pizza hut I ended up turning it on as the 4 young blokes at the next table spent all their time shouting down their phones. After much head scratching they had to go to the door to use their phones, and we got to eat in peace

As for whether they work on trackers etc. I can't really think of another use for them ?

I bought mine from DealExtreme

The one below is $21 including postage from Hong Kong.



[Edited on 27/11/10 by UncleFista]


MikeR - 27/11/10 at 10:19 PM

Note the blockers are illegal in the uk.

I'm sure you'll find any tampering will be sackable. I'd be surprised (unless you work for the NHS - long story) that if you say you don't want one in your vehicle you'll find you no longer have a job.


expatkiwi - 27/11/10 at 10:25 PM

quote:
Originally posted by gavin174
a tracker is there so the vehicle can be recovered if stolen..

it cannot be used to momitor your movements..

unless you sign to say it can.

invassion of privacy etc etc..

european court and all that...


We have them in our vans and although I have nothing to hide we are being watched where ever we go. I know this as I got a call one day which I answered on the hands free of course and I was asked where I was and before I could answer I heard one of the office ejits answer it for me. I have also been in the office and watched all our vans move around on the big screen. Privacy my backside. There is no trust in the demolition company I work for


andrew - 27/11/10 at 10:31 PM

why do you want to disable it they are there to stop oiks taking libertys with what is not theirs,,,, you have the vehicle for work , you get paid to work , i would sack you no question ,,


expatkiwi - 27/11/10 at 10:38 PM

quote:
Originally posted by andrew
why do you want to disable it they are there to stop oiks taking libertys with what is not theirs,,,, you have the vehicle for work , you get paid to work , i would sack you no question ,,


Aggree
I go to work to get my cash to support my family and if there is a tinsy winsy bit left over I can spend it on my car


locosaki - 27/11/10 at 10:57 PM

My firm and my vans but a few of the vans are not reading when the trackers are checked so I'm curious as to how this can be ?

Had the trackers checked and all tested but no problems found.

Andrew I hope you don't run your own firm with that attitude !!


MikeR - 27/11/10 at 11:20 PM

where are the trackers?

I know a trick in the trucks used to be to put your tea tray (metal of course) on your dashboard. Turns out they all just happened to put the tea tray ontop of the bit that contained the GPS tracker. As the metal tracker covered the GPS unit, it couldn't get a signal and report its location. Every night the driver took his stuff (including tea tray) home - therefore every time the trucks were checked, they worked fine.

Could it be something like this?


bi22le - 27/11/10 at 11:54 PM

I would suggest that the best way is to have a dig around and check how many antennas and locations of them. Depending on the model of tracker some use a combined GPS GSM some use seperate. They are both used to track your vehicle.

Depending on the number of them and location I would get a piece of lead cladding (used for roofing and insulating) and place above the antannae. This would block the signal and cut tracking. GPS GSM signals are often lost and not considered to be unusual. Just dont do it during office hours (It will be obvious as your van location disapears off of the tracking screen) and dont do it too often. The lead can easily be removed and hidden in the car when not needed to leaving not signs. It is also often tar backed so will be sticky!!

I used to fit lots of trackers to work and fleet vehicles and saw lots of tricks to stop them working. This seemed to to work best!!!

Dont be tempted to cut the power. They will have battery backup and will flag an alarm.

Hope that helps.


MkIndy7 - 27/11/10 at 11:57 PM

I wouldn't always suspect the worse then if it isin't occuring often...
The Tracker company if there leased will tell you there the best most accurate thing ever!

One of our Vans often reports its in Blackpool when you can see it parked in the yard!
My top recorded speed in a Kangoo Van is 127mph
And they often don't work at other times aswell, falsely reporting where you are or what time you started work
and often stop working for days on end and then start again, but its not worth losing out time to pull the vans off the road to sort out whats wrong with them.

Our company isisn't really bothered about their accuracy as there not for asset management, or checking who's closest to a job etc or helping you find a suppliers or justifying a bill to customers.. they are there to catch you having 5 mins too long on a lunch break when theres a big Que in the Cafe, or starting 5 mins late cos you've had to fill the windscreen washer bottle up.. because the tracker takes president over all other logical sensible reasoning because it displays in black and white!.

But admittedly if your not doing anything wrong and have nothing to hide then theres no arguement against them.


Ninehigh - 28/11/10 at 04:09 AM

quote:
Originally posted by expatkiwi
quote:
Originally posted by gavin174
a tracker is there so the vehicle can be recovered if stolen..

it cannot be used to momitor your movements..

unless you sign to say it can.

invassion of privacy etc etc..

european court and all that...


We have them in our vans and although I have nothing to hide we are being watched where ever we go. I know this as I got a call one day which I answered on the hands free of course and I was asked where I was and before I could answer I heard one of the office ejits answer it for me. I have also been in the office and watched all our vans move around on the big screen. Privacy my backside. There is no trust in the demolition company I work for


Sounds like you need to get your contract out and give it a good reading over. Next time remind them that the tracker is for theft recovery purposes not spying, and I might well spend my next day off actually breathing down his neck see how he feels like it.

Personally i'm not comfortable with anyone stood behind me, and the thought that it's happening by proxy would still give me that same feeling. Plus I find it a personal insult that someone has to be watching me


expatkiwi - 28/11/10 at 06:49 AM

quote:
Originally posted by Ninehigh
quote:
Originally posted by expatkiwi
quote:
Originally posted by gavin174
a tracker is there so the vehicle can be recovered if stolen..

it cannot be used to momitor your movements..

unless you sign to say it can.

invassion of privacy etc etc..

european court and all that...


We have them in our vans and although I have nothing to hide we are being watched where ever we go. I know this as I got a call one day which I answered on the hands free of course and I was asked where I was and before I could answer I heard one of the office ejits answer it for me. I have also been in the office and watched all our vans move around on the big screen. Privacy my backside. There is no trust in the demolition company I work for


Sounds like you need to get your contract out and give it a good reading over. Next time remind them that the tracker is for theft recovery purposes not spying, and I might well spend my next day off actually breathing down his neck see how he feels like it.

Personally i'm not comfortable with anyone stood behind me, and the thought that it's happening by proxy would still give me that same feeling. Plus I find it a personal insult that someone has to be watching me


Again this is a totally different matter, We dont have employment contracts. I know thats wrong also.They said its in our best interests that we dont but I am not to sure about that. I took my last employer to tribunal( I was not happy to do that but had no choice) and as we had no contract I was also awarded 2 weeks money capped at £350 per week to go with what I was chasing them for
Anyway back on topic now

Brian


MakeEverything - 28/11/10 at 09:10 AM

Companies can use trackers for efficiency purposes, which become a term of employment. It has nothing to do with human rights and all that nanny state crap.

I wouldn't disable it, as some trackers send an alarm to say what their fault is, and also have a backup battery so can still send its position even without external power.

Why would you want to disable it? Tampering with it shows ill intention, and that you have something (Location or speed) to hide. If this impacted on their ability to send the nearest vehicle to a callout, then they could (in worst cases) pursue you for loss of earnings in a worst case scenario. Funnily enough, ive just seen this happen in a similar situation.

As far as contracts of employment goes, they are obliged to give you a written agreement of some description in line with employment legislation, however just because you dont have one doesn't mean that youre not employed.


locosaki - 28/11/10 at 11:40 AM

The tracker is at the back of the drivers seat and there is 1 antenna on the roof.

From what I can tell this has 1 live feed from the battery( with a 10amp fuse ) and a ignition live (1amp fuse) the van in question has no sign of tampering, I never actually noted down the make of the tracker but will do this later. From what I'm led to believe these are old hat tracking devices now !!


Ninehigh - 28/11/10 at 08:57 PM

quote:
Originally posted by expatkiwi
They said its in our best interests that we dont but I am not to sure about that.
Brian


Damn right it's in his best interest not to offer you a contract, because there can be anything in there and the fact that you haven't seen it doesn't mean squat, you work there thus you agree to that contract.

Actually while I think of it (sorry about this) but the last solicitor I spoke to about this also says the contract can mention a company handbook. They don't ever have to show you this, and they can change any part of this at any time without telling you and once again you agree to it or you work somewhere else.

[Edited on 28/11/10 by Ninehigh]


martyn_16v - 28/11/10 at 10:12 PM

quote:
Originally posted by locosaki
Andrew I hope you don't run your own firm with that attitude !!


Why not? If the company are supplying you a van that is clearly for work use only, and you use it out of work, not only are you breaking company policy/instruction, you're avoiding company car tax, and possibly not insured. If you had a crash on your on time and the company decided to get snotty about it, you could even find yourself charged with TWOC'ing it. Sacking people for taking the widdle with your vehicles isn't unreasonable.


Ninehigh - 28/11/10 at 10:21 PM

quote:
Originally posted by martyn_16v
quote:
Originally posted by locosaki
Andrew I hope you don't run your own firm with that attitude !!


Why not? If the company are supplying you a van that is clearly for work use only, and you use it out of work, not only are you breaking company policy/instruction, you're avoiding company car tax, and possibly not insured. If you had a crash on your on time and the company decided to get snotty about it, you could even find yourself charged with TWOC'ing it. Sacking people for taking the widdle with your vehicles isn't unreasonable.


True but the problem is with some people they use it to make sure you haven't made an unscheduled stop for a twix and 10 Marlboro and other similar small liberties.


MikeR - 28/11/10 at 10:31 PM

in reality, its about being reasonable - stop for your twix, and work an extra half hour one day when the company needs it.

Stop for your twix, fag break, read the newspaper and say "sod off" when the company wants the half hour & i'd want you out as well. Its a two way street.


AbramSearcy - 25/3/14 at 07:14 AM

A teacher, or the prison, more and more ares are considering the legal use of cell phone jammers, it has been a necessity of our daily life, I have got one rf signal blocker for my family. so if you want to get one, you can go and visit it for more details. share with you!


Not Anumber - 25/3/14 at 08:43 AM

quote:
Originally posted by AbramSearcy
A teacher, or the prison, more and more ares are considering the legal use of cell phone jammers, it has been a necessity of our daily life, I have got one rf signal blocker for my family. so if you want to get one, you can go and visit it for more details. share with you!


My colleages at Ofcom are very interested in more details, where did you say you lived ?


Scuzzle - 25/3/14 at 11:38 AM

They are not great at getting a signal through carbon fibre, if you put a sheet of carbon fibre between the tracker and the sky that will usually stop it.

My cars tracker would not work when I mounted it in the engine bay under a CF bonnet, moved it into the cabin and it was fine. Don't know if a more expensive pro tracker would be better though.


scootz - 25/3/14 at 11:59 AM

Wrap the car in tinfoil (but leave an A4-sheet sized section clear on the windscreen so you can see where you're going... obviously!). Et voilą... job done - you can now drive it like you stole it!


bi22le - 25/3/14 at 01:02 PM

Park your car in an underground car park.

They will never find it and you can use it as much as you like!


Ninehigh - 25/3/14 at 03:16 PM

Y'all are of course going on the assumption that the tracker is being watched


nick205 - 25/3/14 at 04:44 PM

Thread resurrection of the year that must be