Amcrest – 4G LTE GPS Tracker – Product Review

This post contains references to products from one or more of our advertisers. We may receive compensation when you click on links to those products.

I reached out to Amcrest to participate in a product review for some of their products. Actually it was on one of my social media platforms, and I decided to check it out to see what it was all about.

Amcrest reached out to me to test their GPS Tracker (AM-GL300W-4G) and they will reimburse me for the product purchase.

Amazon Listing Information:

COMPACT 4G GPS TRACKER

Perfect for tracking vehicles, loved ones (teens, spouses, children, elderly) or assets. With its sleek and compact design, it easily slips into cars, backpacks, strollers, luggage and is highly concealable. With 2G coverage slowly coming to an end, now is the time to upgrade to 4G.

Monthly subscription required.

No contracts or activation/cancellation fees.
$19.99 – 60 second updates 
$24.99 – 30 second updates  
$29.99 – 15 second updates 
$34.99 – 5 second updates

REAL-TIME SMARTPHONE & PC TRACKING

With lighting fast 4G LTE this GPS tracker offers real-time tracking with up to 5-second updates through Windows and MAC desktop web-access (Chrome, Safari, Edge, Firefox) or through the Amcrest GPS smartphone app (iOS/Android). The intuitive user interface allows you to easily monitor activity, manage alerts and generate custom reports. Create links and share them with your friends, family and co-workers to keep track of cars, children, seniors and assets.

GEO-FENCING, SMART ALERTS & REPORTS

Create custom geo-fencing zones that alert you anytime the GPS tracker enters or exits a zone. Speed limit, harsh breaking, start/stop and proximity alerts allow you to easily track your vehicles and loved ones. Receive text, push and email notifications directly to your smartphone or PC with the Amcrest GPS app and desktop web-access client. Access your data with intelligent reporting directly from your iPhone, Android, Mac or PC.

BUILT TO LAST – EXTENDED BATTERY

This Amcrest 4G GPS Tracker is built to last with heavy-duty materials including an IPX5 water resistant housing as well as extended 2600mah battery which lasts up to 10-14+ days on a full charge with 60sec updates (7-8 days with 30sec updates, 4-5 days with 15sec updates, and 2-3 days with 5sec updates). Utilizes Google Maps for tracking and mapping.

LIFETIME WARRANTY & SUPPORT – IMPORTANT

This device is configured to work in the US, Canada, and Mexico only. Does Not work in Australia. We stand by our products and offer a lifetime warranty and unlimited support. In the event that your device produces undesirable results, we’ll gladly refund 100% of your hardware and subscription charges.

Additional Cases can be purchased from ASIN’s: B07R8WFTG5 & B081TK15YB (GPS Pouch). GPS Pouch included with the purchase of a 4G GPS Tracker.

Product cost:

GPS Device $49.00 + Tax (If you can find it on Sale for $39.00 at Amazon)

Plus the monthly subscription costs

Product Testing

Unboxing

Setup

There were no actual instruction in the box just a Quick start guide that gave you links to look at on the Amcrest website. This made things a little hard to know what to do the first time, and required me to go get my computer to actually read the instructions as they were nearly impossible to see on my mobile phone.

Setting up the account was fairly easy and straight forward.

Ease of Use

Over all it is fairly easy to use once you know what the blinking lights mean on the front of the device and get the account setup on the Amcrest website. Setting up the alerts and Geo Fencing zones took a little bit of time, but was fairly straight forward.

Battery Life

Battery life is not the greatest, and at the highest setting for polling (1 minute) you can get 10 to 14 days of use before needing a recharge. If you use the highest polling (5 seconds) option the device will last about 2 to 3 days. There are plans to have less polling options, and one that is every 24hrs, I was not able to look at those options for some reason.

For me the device should have a longer lasting batter life, closer to like 30 days for general usage, and maybe a full week for the highest usage.

The charging cable is a USB mini, which is strange and makes me believe they went on the cheap for that. The power adapter is an odd size and does not work well on some power outlets especially if space is limited and stacked side by side. The device does not seem to charge by plugging into a computer USB port which is a bummer, and did not seem to get it to work in a vehicle USB charger as well.

Geo Fencing

This is a nice feature, and will allow you to set up to 12 Geo Fence areas to alert on. I have a couple set up to test the device. It will alert me upon leaving my neighborhood and entering back into my neighborhood.

It uses Google Maps, and allows you to drawl an area to create a Zone.

Zone From One City Park to another City Park

Have noticed that if the cell service is not that great you might get an alert as the device thinks it is out side of the zone. I had to adjust the zone area a little wider to accommodate for that to not get bogus alerts.

Alerts

You can setup alerts based on zone exit or entry as well as speed, power, SOS, and Trip

Device Setting to configure main alerts for the device:

You can adjust the speed alert, if the device is on or off, and the low battery level

Recommendation

PROS:

The device is small and portable and is easily stashed in a glove box or in a small pocket.

The alerts and notifications are decent and you can see trip detail information on an actual map.

Speeding alert notifications, it will show you where the speeding was first detected on a map.

The Geo Fencing features is nice to allow for alerting on specific areas for entry and exit of that area.

CONS:

Battery life is not that great (10 – 14 days)

Charging cable is a very old standard, would have been better with a USB micro which has been a standard cable for many products for years. Maybe look into a USB C connector which is becoming the latest standard cable options.

DECISION:

I would recommend this device to people who want to track things, like a kid using a car, or a worker using a company vehicle. It is a decent price for what your getting, and the $20 monthly fee for the monitoring is comparable to a cellular plan.

Starting a Side Hustle – Why is it a new must do thing

I have been watching many YouTube videos during the 2020 lock down. Learning how to pick stocks and buy the Dip, how to do Drop Shipping, how to do Print of Demand (POD), as well as how to start utilizing YouTube for a side hustle. While it is interesting to listen to many of these videos telling you how you can make tons of money by doing what they have done. Most of them want you to buy into some membership or program that gives you exclusive access to their content on how to do what they are pushing. I for one am not willing to pay for their expertise on how to do something as that would defeat the purpose I came to watch the videos. I want to learn how to do these things without paying for it, I am willing to put in the time and effort to learn what is needed and not pay some “Guru” on how to do it. First off if they were that successful in a specific area they would spend more time doing the one thing that is making them the most money, and since it takes a lot of time and effort to make videos, my guess is that is where they make the most money.

Andrei Jikh

While I do like most of the people I watch as far as content value goes. Some have a great video presence, like Andrei Jikh, who uses his cardistry and magic to add more to the videos besides just the information they are providing. I also watch Ask Sebby, Wallers Wallet, Brian Jung, JJ Buckner, Jake Broe and The Credit Shifu as I like their content of their videos and I do get great value from them. If I like you content I will give you the Thumbs Up and smash the like button.

There are many others who are decent with the content they provide but are always pushing the other paid features they offer, and never provide the full details to what they are discussing. That drives me crazy, they talk all around what they want you to know, and then try to get you to go to their paid course to get the full details. I for one am not wanting to pay for some extra course to further my possibility to become rich in one area. While I have told people in the past you have to spend money to make money, I do not see the need to pay for specific knowledge when I can learn that by other means. I would prefer to learn with out paying for the knowledge, especially when the information is freely available and I can learn it if I take the time and not just pay someone to give me the cliff notes version.

It seems that everyone is trying to get some kind of side hustle going on theses days, for one reason or another, they want the extra income. Mostly they see people telling them how great it is to have a side hustle and how much money they make from it. I have heard some people say that a side hustle is just a second job, and I started thinking, that is not completely the same things in my opinion. While it is a second job of sorts, it does not have the constraints that a normal second job would have. First you get to set the hours you will work and how long and often you want to work. I guess I would consider it more of a free lancer with no hard commitments.

Side Hustle Ideas:

  • Uber / Lyft driver
  • YouTube content creator
  • Print on Demand products
  • Drop Shipping products
  • Real estate investor
  • Take your hobby and make a business

Have multiple income streams is the new normal for many people, and the side hustle is the way to build that income streams.

Why a Side Hustle:

  • Salaries are not growing that much
  • Cost of living is going up faster than wages
  • Single point of failure in your income
  • Allow for more savings for retirement

Red Bubble

I am probably not going to start a YouTube channel, not something that really interests me and I would not want to keep up with it. I have started a Red Bubble shop, added a few things up there to see how that goes. Working on a few designs and trying to determine a niche that I want to focus on long term. I like traveling so that is my primary focus on the designs, but need to get a little more fine tuned to designs. I kind of like the shop aspect as I am actually learning to use tools I have wanted to learn for a while. Have been learning Inkscape and Gimp by watching videos from another Youtuber Logos by Nick. He has some cool designs and I have been working to incorporate them into my designs, and learning how to use the applications. Do I expect to make a ton of money from this, probably not, but if it takes off that would be nice. In the long run I have learned a few things and that might help me down the road in something.

If the thought of making some extra money then take the leap, I do not believe that it should cost you a bunch of money to start. Start small and work your way up from there, nothing in life is free, you have to work for it, put in the effort and don’t quite. In the long run you might be able to end up leaving your current full time job to make your side hustle into your full time business. As I have always said, if you enjoy your job you will never work again. If you hate your job, then your trading your time for a paycheck. I am in that current situation, I am trading time for a paycheck. I enjoy the work but it is not what I would do if I had a choice, it just allows me to pay the bills, pay for my kids college and save a bunch for my retirement.