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SportDog Brand Dog Training Collars

SportDog Electronic Collars and GPS Training Systems for Gun Dogs

SportDog electronic collars and GPS training systems are built around the reality that most serious gun dog handlers are running more than one dog, and the setup needs to scale without adding a transmitter to your vest for every dog in the string. SportDog electronic training collars run from the close-working FieldTrainer through the long-range SportHunter, WetlandHunter, HoundHunter, and ProHunter series — every one of them expandable to a second or third dog on the same handheld with an Add-A-Dog collar. The UplandHunter 1875 is the practical choice for pointing dog handlers who want a beeper running and training control on the same receiver — nine tones, remote tone change at a mile, and no extra unit on the dog's neck. Add-A-Dog collars expand any compatible SportDog system without a second transmitter — the one rule is matching the collar series to the transmitter series you already run. SportDog no bark collars with Silent Partner bark detection handle the kennel line between hunts. Questions about which SportDog system fits how you run your dogs? Call us at 800-338-3647.

Choosing the right SportDog system

Start by deciding if you need a SportDog remote trainer, a SportDog GPS e-collar, or a combined system for days when you both train and track. Add-A-Dog collars matter when you run multiple dogs and want one transmitter to manage the group. If you’re locating a dog in cover, a SportDog beeper collar can add an audible reference when visibility drops. For kennel runs and home use, SportDog no bark collars focus on bark control, while a SportDog in-ground electric fence is about boundary training and consistent containment.

SportDog collar questions that come up in the field

What is the difference between a SportDog remote trainer and a SportDog GPS tracking collar?

A SportDog remote trainer focuses on dog training with an e-collar, while a SportDog GPS tracking collar focuses on tracking a dog’s location. A SportDog GPS e-collar combines both functions when you want training control and GPS tracking in one system.

When does a SportDog TEK Series GPS/E-Collar make sense over a standard e-collar?

A SportDog TEK Series GPS/E-Collar makes sense when you need GPS tracking and e-collar training at the same time. A standard SportDog electronic collar is a simpler fit when you only need training control.

How do SportDog Add-A-Dog collars help with multi-dog handling?

SportDog Add-A-Dog collars expand a dog training system so one handler can run more than one collar. SportDog Add-A-Dog collars are used when you want the same transmitter to communicate with multiple dogs.

When would you use a SportDog beeper collar instead of GPS?

A SportDog beeper collar is useful when you want an audible way to locate a dog in cover or low visibility. A SportDog GPS tracking collar is the better fit when you want location tracking on a handheld rather than sound.

What does a SportDog no bark collar do compared to an e-collar?

A SportDog no bark collar is for bark control, while a SportDog electronic collar is for handler-directed dog training. SportDog no bark collars are typically used for kennel or home situations where barking is the problem to solve.

What is a SportDog in-ground electric fence used for?

A SportDog in-ground electric fence is used for boundary training and containment. A SportDog in-ground electric fence pairs with an electric fence collar to keep a dog within a defined area.

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