New anti-theft GPS bike tracker: What does our expert think?

Watch out thieves, there’s a GPS in there.
(Photos: GPS Track This)

[Via BikeBiz]

Word is quickly spreading on the Interwebs tonight about what many have considered the Holy Grail of bike theft — a GPS tracker for bicycles.

UK-based GPS Track This now offers (wholesale only at this point it seems) the “Spylamp Bicycle GPS Tracker”, a small device that is hidden in a rear light. They also offer a free smartphone/text/web service that can track your bike when it gets stolen. Here’s an excerpt from a story in BikeBiz.com:

“Activated by pressing the on/off button for three seconds, the light flashes three times to confirm it is activated. The Spylamp has a vibration sensor, which is armed when activated, detecting movement in the event of a bike thief stealing the bike. The device sends an SMS text message to the owners mobile to notify that the bike is moving, and then uploads its position to GPS Track This’ website every 20 seconds until the vibration has stopped. The website plots the course of the bike on a map, revealing the bike’s location.”

I asked our resident bike theft expert, creator of StolenBicycleRegistry.com and co-developer of the BikePortland Stolen Bike Listings Bryan Hance, what his thoughts were about this potentially revolutionary product:

1) I question if it’ll play nice with US cellular networks, the SIM/text charges will differ over here depending on the cellular provider. Its tech specs make it look compatible with our networks but since they’re shipping with a UK/Tesco prepaid SIM I wonder what the cheapest equivalent will be here in the U.S. (The two biggest cell providers in the U.S. that support GPRS, according to Wikipedia, are AT&T and T-mobile. The cheapest prepaid T-mobile card is $10.)

2) 1 year battery life? seriously? my standard light doesn’t even last this long, so I wonder if this is actually true

3) Cops may not 100% like it because they don’t like people recovering their own gear. Leads to assaults. Plus even with GPS tracking if it’s in an apartment building or other high density area you’re pretty much screwed. But still better than nothing.

4) Thieves will adapt and start looking for these but this mention is more promising “The firm also similar tracking devices in the works too, including a tracker hidden inside the bicycle frame”.

If the Spylamp proves reliable in the field, it could change how law enforcement and communities across the globe deal with the scourge of bike theft. Bryan has requested a review sample. We’ll keep you posted. In the meantime, poke around the GPS Track This website or download the Spylamp owners manual (PDF) to learn more.

Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor)

Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor)

Founder of BikePortland (in 2005). Father of three. North Portlander. Basketball lover. Car owner and driver. If you have questions or feedback about this site or my work, feel free to contact me at @jonathan_maus on Twitter, via email at maus.jonathan@gmail.com, or phone/text at 503-706-8804. Also, if you read and appreciate this site, please become a supporter.

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Nick
Nick
13 years ago

T-Mobile’s cheapest pre-paid plan costs $10 every 3 months to keep the line active. Each text message it sends costs 10 cents. Pretty reasonable, I think.

Matt Haughey
13 years ago

Garmin recently released a GPS beacon that lasts up to a year called “The Chirp“. They made it primarily for use as a geocaching point (people with GPS units traipse around the countryside looking for it and get clues as they get close) but after reading about that light with GPS, it’s possible to do something like that Chirp epoxied underneath your seat or in a seat bag to track.

Steve Montalto
13 years ago

Hum – it’s an interesting idea but a rear light can easily and quickly be removed. The attachment to the bike needs to be more permanent and their should be a separate “permenant”, and visible, notice that the bike is traceable to serve as a deterrent.

Joe
Joe
13 years ago

how about a zapper, person jumps on gets zapped falls off and runs.. haha love this device BTW… would be cool it you could track and wait, then wham,
knock them off with a bat.. LOL

KWW
KWW
13 years ago

Great, my bike stolen and they can now recover the light….

Tim Roth
13 years ago

What KWW said. More often than not, tail-lights get stolen before the bike does. Flaw.

jim
jim
13 years ago
Reply to  Tim Roth

that was the first thing I thought too, people steal lights more than bikes

KWW
KWW
13 years ago
Reply to  Tim Roth

What I was inferring is that many bikes when stolen are stripped of equipment, so that ID’ing them becomes harder.

Plus, the equipment can also be sold at any bike parts store that buys parts, ahem…

CaptainKarma
13 years ago

I totally like the Chirper. Sounds like a better scenario.

ayresjk
ayresjk
13 years ago

yeah….first thing to do now when stealing a bike….chuck rear light. seems like it would be better if it were mounted discretely in the frame or handlebar?

q`Tzal
q`Tzal
13 years ago

Any self contained GPS device will not work from inside the frame as GPS signals are completely attenuated by metal; essentially a faraday cage. I have heard rumors the same would apply to carbon fiber and graphite frames. The thickness of the frame material and the overall low power of the signal when it reaches earth support this.

The crafty frame builder will put the device inside the frame but route out two wires for the antenna which get attached to the bare frame, contoured and painted over.

dwainedibbly
dwainedibbly
13 years ago
Reply to  q`Tzal

If the frame is metal, make the frame itself the antenna! (sorry if someone else has already suggested this)

q`Tzal
q`Tzal
13 years ago
Reply to  dwainedibbly

An effective antenna needs to be quarter of a wavelength long relative to the desire receive frequency.
Received signal power for a particular frequency drops off quickly as the antenna’s natural resonance differs from the desired frequency.

The GPS SPS L1 band frequency is 1575.42 Mhz, or 1575420000 Hz.
The wavelength a GPS antenna designed for 1575.42 Mhz is:
c / 1575420000 = .19029 Meters, or ~ 19 CM. or ~ 7 1/2 Inches.

The frame of a conductive metal bike is clearly the wrong size to use as the antenna for GPS.

jim
jim
13 years ago

Maybe they will make it mandatory for all bikes to have chirpers? Then big brother can keep tabs of your every movement, places, time of day, who else was there, do you need to pay a toll for that last trip…. kind of like what they had in mind for cars.

sean
13 years ago

Why not take the “chirper” and insert into your handlebar, seapost – or is it too big?

Spiffy
Spiffy
13 years ago

I think it’s a great idea… if the light is stolen you can track it individually… and everybody leaves the lights on the bike when they steal it, at least until they get it home to swap them out…

but if it becomes mainstream then thieves will start ditching the light right away… will definitely need to be hidden in the frame somewhere with an external antenna wire…

wondering about the cost myself… and I’ve dealt with GPRS and I just don’t trust the reliability of it… I’d like to see how it works around here with all the trees or downtown buildings…

bhance
bhance
13 years ago

Chirp looks very cool however I’m not sure it would work for bike tracking. Issues:

– need for a Garmin-brand handheld to locate & program a Chirp
– Max. 32 foot range
– “Do not mount the chirp inside a metal container.”
– No active map-based tracking

Although a Chirp-like system would be excellent for recovery warehouse kind of use – ID’ing bikes already in a pile somewhere. Way better than the RFID style tagging since it ups the detection to 32 feet …

Alistair
Alistair
13 years ago

This is how it begins, someone gets a novel product in the field so they (and other compnaies) can learn what works and evolve what doesn’t.

Remeber the Apple Newton? Ugh.
Then at last the iPhone. Brilliant.

We want less bike theft and GPS & Cellular will likely be part of the solution so this makes me very happy.

rider
rider
13 years ago

This is great, unless of course it leads to “Where you at?” Boost Mobile style commercials.

bDave
bDave
13 years ago

I’ve been told that in the southern-most states, nearly everyone has Lojack installed on anything that isn’t bolted to the ground. I’m moving to Europe soon and I am outfitting both of my bikes and my luggages with ReuniteIt! and Lojack tags.

Draw your own conclusion: http://www.lojack.com/why/pages/lojack-vehicle-recovery-vs-gps-vehicle-tracking-and-anti-theft-devices.aspx

For bikes: http://www.reuniteit.com/bicycle-security.aspx

bhance
bhance
13 years ago

LoJack only works in places where the local PD’s have purchased the LoJack RF-locating gear. Great tech though. And sticker systems are nice but easily defeated.

matt picio
13 years ago

Awesome – now I can find out who keeps stealing my tail lights.

The light portion is kind of irrelevant – there are a number of locations where this device could be placed – you could even build it into a water bottle cage or a saddle, or handlebar bar ends – anywhere not encased by metal.

jv
jv
13 years ago

The best application of this type of product would be to integrate it into the bottom bracket ! – A BB is one of the bike parts least likely to be quickly stripped, and also could be used to generate a tiny amount of power to keep the unit charged forever. As mentioned before – bike lights are not secure. I have replaced 3 already in the last 2 years due to my own negligence in taking it off before locking up my bike…

Hart Noecker
13 years ago

A GPS tracking system for what is obviously a too-expesive-to-be-left-on-the-street bike? Talk about yuppie-crack.

Mindful Cyclist
Mindful Cyclist
13 years ago

Like the idea, but have to agree with so many others here that a light is a very easy thing to steal. I have one bike that I do not take the light off, but the clip is broken and would like to replace the thing anyway.

jim
jim
13 years ago

I remember years ago in NY NY a person used to gift wrap their garbage everyday and leave it on their porch, everyday the garbage was gone. With this device they could find out who has been stealing their garbage all these years…

Jon
13 years ago

Regarding the sim charges and if they work in the USA. We supply thousands of sims for our tracking systems. These unit are built to be used worldwide, the sim picks up the APN number here from T-Mobile, AT&T etc.

Guest
Guest
12 years ago

If a bike thief carries light tools to break the lock/cable/chain, u-lock, then an extra pair of pliers to smash the tail light without having to remove it would be simple and effective. Additionally, pro bike thieves are up to date on this product.

Henry
Henry
12 years ago

Matt Haughey
Garmin recently released a GPS beacon that lasts up to a year called “The Chirp“. They made it primarily for use as a geocaching point (people with GPS units traipse around the countryside looking for it and get clues as they get close) but after reading about that light with GPS, it’s possible to do something like that Chirp epoxied underneath your seat or in a seat bag to track.
Recommended 0

It says on Garmin’s site that the Chirp has a range of 10m

Juan
Juan
10 years ago

I wouldn’t buy this device because is not well built. doesn’t work properly and the support people are not professional even though is not a cheap device. I want to share my experience with SpyLamp 2.

I ordered SpyLamp around May, I’m located in Canada so I guessed was going to take some time the delivery. But first took like 3 weeks just to get a tracking number after I paid. I ha to send emails to support and they apologize because they said they were changing mail carriers. So finally I got a tracking number after almost a month of paying.

I finally received the device on July. I left it charging and went to buy a SIM card to test it, I noticed that every time I disconnected it was turning off. I gave a couple of tries and the device was not working.

I contacted support again and they said the battery was not working that they will send a battery so I disassemble the bad one and assemble the new one. Kinda weird but there you go another waiting.

Is October and never get anything. I think I was very patience but was time to contact them again. They said we send the battery since July. We assumed you get it and everything was fine (so the assumption means no tracking number). And I said no I never get it. I asked for my refund because there have passed 5 months. But after that I never heard back from them. I keep sending messages but haven’t get back.

So you guys think about it before buying a device that is useless and expensive.

Thanks
Juan

DaleS
DaleS
9 years ago

Just wanted to add the company appears to be dodgy. Use paypal protection to get refund because refunding you is not on their priority list and they will start ignoring you.
It took 3 weeks for it to come (I am only 3 hours away) and then i couldn’t get signal (though I am in a large town)
Juan’s review saved me because I didn’t go for the replacement option they offered me.
they rudely shut the door on me and I won’t be coming back.
BTW it’s a shame, I would have wanted to buy another and try it because it still sounds amazing to have.

GggMmm
GggMmm
9 years ago

It’s been two months ago when I bought a GPS tracking bike lamp, which goes under various names: SpyLamp, SpyBike GPS tracking device, XY-B01, XY-B02, etc., with a range of similar models based on exactly the same technical device inside. I bought it directly from a producer in China (it cost me approx. 150 USD, although the initial price to pay, together with the shipping was promised to be 96 USD).
I installed it properly, put a separate SIM card inside etc. The device worked for 3 days in total. ONLY. Then it stopped.
It stopped responding to the so-called master number, i.e. my proper mobile phone which communicates with the SIM card in the GPS tracking lamp. It did not communicate at all for about 3 weeks. Afer I contacted the producer lots of times, the lamp suddenly responded (after everything was reactivated) and started sending SMSes to my master phone number permanently, and then I began to received allert phone calls continuously: 18 phone calls within three hours at night, when everybody was asleep and the bike was just standing there in the next room.
The lamp tracked the position of my bike only for the first three days. Then it stopped for ever.
The vibration sensor in the lamp activates itself at random with no correlation to the vibration in the real world. It begings to blink in the middle of the night or any time of day and night without a reason. However, when the bike is really shaken or in motion, the sensor NEVER reacts.
The producer also ceased to respond to my queries and does not care: there is no help from their side.
So, be aware: the lamp promises a lot (and as an idea it sounds great), but in practice is is USELESS. It’s a waste of money.

GggMmm
GggMmm
9 years ago

It’s been two months ago when I bought a GPS tracking bike lamp, which goes under various names: SpyLamp, SpyBike GPS tracking device, XY-B01, XY-B02, GT3061, etc., with a range of similar models based on exactly the same technical device inside. I bought it directly from a producer in China (it cost me approx. 150 USD, although the initial price to pay, together with the shipping was promised to be 96 USD).
I installed it properly, put a separate SIM card inside etc. The device worked for 3 days in total. ONLY. Then it stopped. I doublechecked the SIM card in the GPS lamp: it is OK, full credict, batteries fully charged. The GPS SIM card, once put to a mobile phone, sends SMSs, makes phonecalls etc.
The lamp stopped responding to the so-called master number (i.e. my proper mobile phone which communicates with the SIM card in the GPS tracking lamp) after 3 days. Aferwards, it did not communicate at all for about 3 weeks. Afer I contacted the producer lots of times, the lamp suddenly responded (after everything was reactivated) and started sending SMSes to my master phone number permanently, and then I began to received allert phone calls continuously: 18 phone calls within three hours at night, when everybody was asleep and the bike was just standing there in the next room. It was not possible to stop the lamp from calling me again and again, even though the bicycle was not in motion and no movement around it. Then it suddenly stopped again.
The lamp tracked the position of my bike only for the first three days. Then it stopped for ever.
The vibration sensor in the lamp activates itself at random with no correlation to the vibration in the real world. It begings to blink in the middle of the night or any time of day and night without a reason. However, when the bike is really shaken or in motion, the sensor NEVER reacts.
The way the GPS tracking lamp works is unpredictable und absolutely unreliable.
The producer also ceased to respond to my queries and does not care: there is no help from their side.
So, be aware: the lamp promises a lot (and as an idea it sounds great), but in practice is is USELESS. It’s a waste of money.

James Mason
James Mason
8 years ago

All this technology is great, but we need to remember that our ancestors used to hang horse thieves. The first step should be to make the consequences of stealing a bike severe. Like maybe a poke up the anus with a red-hot tire iron. I don’t think they’ll let us hang them, although it wouldn’t bother me.