The device

Hardware that lives where the gear lives.

Cellular GPS on the Telstra LTE-M network. IP67 sealed. Low-profile, magnetic or hardwired mount. Battery backup against a power cut. Australian stock.

LTE-M

Telstra network

IP67

Dust + water rated

−20°C / +60°C

Operating range

AU stock

Shipped local

Spec sheet

What's in the box.

  • Cellular

    LTE-M (CAT-M1) on the Telstra network in Australia

  • GPS / GNSS

    GPS + GLONASS + Galileo, 3–5m outdoor accuracy

  • Battery

    Internal rechargeable, multi-year low-power reporting, weeks live

  • Power

    Internal battery or 12V/24V hardwired auxiliary feed

  • IP rating

    IP67 sealed against dust and short-term immersion

  • Operating temp

    −20°C to +60°C — handles summer Hilux toolboxes

  • Mounting

    Magnetic mount, adhesive pad, fixing kit included

  • Dimensions

    Roughly the size of a cigarette packet — fits inside most kit storage

Install

Three ways to mount it.

The right install depends on the asset. We will spec it with you when you order — here is the shortlist.

  1. Self-install (toolbox, Packout, TSTAK)

    Adhesive or magnet mount inside the box. Five minutes. Best for toolboxes, plastic kit cases and asset bags.

  2. Hardwired (trailer, plant, ute)

    12V or 24V auxiliary feed plus battery backup. 20–30 minutes with a sparkie or auto-electrician. Indefinite live mode runtime.

  3. Fleet install (depot batch)

    For Business plans, we run a depot install day. Twenty to fifty assets done in a session. Bulk activation, role-based access set up before you leave.

Coverage

Where it works.

Anywhere with cellular signal works. LTE-M reaches further than standard 4G in regional pockets and inside buildings. Telstra has the deepest regional footprint of the Australian carriers, which is why we use it.

For genuinely off-grid work — deep Pilbara, Cape York, parts of the Kimberley — talk to us. Satellite-capable trackers exist for the fleets that need them, and we will quote on request.

For New Zealand, the device works on Spark / One NZ / 2degrees with the right SIM provisioning. Shipping and billing both available.

What it isn't

A short list of what TTT is not.

  • Not a Bluetooth tag. AirTags and Tile-style devices need iPhones or Android phones nearby to report. TTT is cellular — works anywhere with signal.
  • Not a panic alarm. The tracker is silent. A beeping device tells the thief where you hid it. Alerts go to your phone, not the device.
  • Not a phone replacement. You manage TTT from the app or browser dashboard. The tracker itself is a pure asset device.
  • Not magic. Cellular signal in a deep steel container drops. Battery dies if you never charge it or wire it in. We're upfront about that.

FAQ

Hardware questions.

The technical questions tradies and fleet managers actually ask.

Which cellular carrier does the TTT tracker use?

TTT runs on the Telstra network in Australia using LTE-M. Telstra has the deepest regional coverage of the Australian carriers and LTE-M reaches further than standard 4G in industrial pockets and inside buildings. The tracker SIM is included in the monthly plan.

What is the battery life on internal battery?

In standard reporting mode (every six hours plus motion-triggered pings), multiple years from the internal battery. In live tracking mode (30-second pings), around 24–72 hours depending on signal. Most installs hardwire to a 12V loom so battery is not the limiting factor — the internal battery acts as backup against a power cut.

What does IP67 actually mean?

IP67 is the international rating for "dust-tight" (no dust ingress) and "water resistant to short-term immersion" (up to 30 minutes at 1 metre). In trade terms: a Hilux toolbox in summer, a wet van floor, a trailer that lives outside — all fine. Permanent submersion is not.

Does the tracker work in New Zealand?

Yes. The device works on NZ cellular networks (Spark / One NZ / 2degrees) with the appropriate SIM provisioning. Shipping, support and billing all available across the Tasman.

Can a thief jam or block the signal?

Cheap jammers exist and are illegal to own in Australia. Determined professional thieves with jamming kit can interrupt cellular GPS, yes. They are rare. Most tool theft is opportunistic — the thief with the jammer is also the thief worth ringing the police about. Last-known location stays in the dashboard either way.

No bull, no lock-in

Want one on your gear before next week?

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