







🐕🦺 Train smarter, not harder — stay ahead in the pack!
The DOG CARE Rechargeable Dog Training Collar offers a humane, versatile solution with 3 training modes—beep, vibration, and adjustable shock—combined with a secure keypad lock to prevent accidental shocks. Rainproof and designed for dogs 15-100 lbs, it supports up to 9 dogs on a single remote with an impressive 330-yard wireless range and long battery life, empowering you to train effectively anywhere while maintaining your dog's comfort and safety.












| Brand | DOG CARE |
| Closure Type | Buckle |
| Color | Black 1 Pack(TC01 Old Version) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 out of 5 stars 73,905 Reviews |
| Item Display Dimensions | 3.57 x 6.6 x 6.57 x 2.24 inches |
| Material | Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene |
| Pattern | for 1 dog |
B**A
Perfect training tool!
After having many dogs of several breeds over my lifetime, for the first time ever, we rescued a dog, half Yorkie and half Jack Russell, that we could not break from barking at everything that moved. Also I should note that this is also the fastest dog alive and we could not catch her to calm her, punish her or reward her. As an absolute last resort, I decided that I would have to give a training collar a shot. I researched many collars and companies and settled with this collar and company because of owner review and feedback. I have always been anti "shock" collar, but this collar has a light and sound only button (on the remote), a vibrate button and lastly a shock option. Before I put the collar on my dog, I put it on my leg and tried each feature. I recommend that everyone do this so you can use this collar responsibly. I only shocked myself on level 1, of 36, and it had my full attention. After this experience I was committed to using the light and sound, then the vibration and only after a great deal verbal and visual training would I use the level one zinger. It is important to note that if you only zap your dog, they will not learn to use their bark responsibly. They will learn bark equals hurt. I wanted to teach my dog to not bark at my neighbors that she sees every single day. I did this by going outside with her when my neighbors were out and telling her "NO SPEAK", we teach our dogs "speak (bark)" to be let outside and inside when potty training. I started out with the light and sound, which totally freaked her out, to the point she was not able to put "NO Speak" and the light/sound together. I continued the training daily, every time she went outside for several days. In a few days she understood the command and the light/noise went together, but after she got past being afraid of the light/noise, she continued to bark, so I took it to the next level, vibrate. Vibrate and No Speak was understood and she was responding well for a couple of days, but as she got use to it, she returned to ignoring me, so I shocked her on level 1. She jumped 3 feet straight up, ran around in a circle and ran straight inside. After that I had a hard time putting the collar on her for a couple of days, but I did put it on her and she was afraid to go outside. I followed her out and showed her the remote when she would bolt to the fence to begin her usual barking routine. I returned to using the light and sound and she responded immediately by STOPPING her barking. Within 2 weeks of the first use, I could just hold the remote in the air and show it to her and she will stop barking. While we are making great headway, we have had a set back due to new construction on 3 sites within her view. I don't punish her for barking at strangers, I reward her, and focus on making her "COME" to me with a "door bell" that indicates to her that it is time to come in. This was fairly simple as she has older dogs to model after. Due to her breed, disposition and the fact that she was a street dog for quite a while, I suspect that she will never be a quiet docile dog, but she has improved 85% in just 2 weeks of diligent use of the collar and consistent training. I have recommended this tool to several friends and neighbors (neighbors who have gone out of their way to tell me they notice a change in her behavior for the better!). The only suggestion for improvement of this product would be to have an extra set of rubber caps for the metal shock connectors. We lost one the first week and luckily a rubber foot from a standing wire folder holder fit perfectly as a substitute. As did a tip end from a wire closet shelf. Great product!!!!
A**R
Long range
I admit, I never wanted to be in the position where I'd need to use a collar like this. I'd had roughly 20 years of effective experience with dog training, and my goal was never to have to use shock. But this product, with it's options for beep/vibration only, as well as the ability to tune the shock level, is a wonderful and humane tool. Years ago, a high-energy, little 14" tall mix-breed dog came into my life. Prior, she'd been encouraged to get easily excited, and nobody consistently quelled her barking. For such a happy and pleasant little dog, her excited bark was ear-piercing and shocking to behold, striking notes somewhere between being aggressive and being abused! (Imagine explaining that to your neighbors!) She'd get so out of her mind with excitement at getting to go somewhere or taking out the garbage...that she'd become mentally unreachable. Then she decided to start barking at the slightest thing - at random times, while in the house. She thought it was perfectly acceptable. By the time I'd be able to grab a leash and get to her, too much time would have passed -- she'd have forgotten that she barked at all and wouldn't mentally connect 'training' with 'barking isn't desirable'. Moreover, she wouldn't bark while on a leash! So I chose this device as the answer -- I'd be able to tell her barking off-leash isn't okay, while she was barking, even if she wasn't immediately nearby. With the remote in the house, the signal reached the collar while it was outside and ~25' away. I'm glad that I could tune the shock level, because despite the fact that the beep/vibrate were bold and obvious, their effects didn't tell my dog to stop barking - she kept right at it. So shock was the last resort. I tuned the collar by shocking my own arm and adjusting - level 15 was when I could feel it with any effect. I set it to 10 since my dog was small, but 15 ended up being what got through to her. In practice, I used something similar to 3x beeps, 5x beep/vibrates, and then zap. When her barking started coming with a small static tingle every time, she quickly reduced her noisemaking until silent. Her upbeat energy remained, and she was still happy. That's great! So has it been effective? Well, I received the collar 4 days ago. By the third day, her barking stopped 90%. Today is Friday, and despite plenty of opportunities, she hasn't barked at all. Given that my goal was only to take the 'bark' out of getting excited and energetic, and not do anything that made her afraid or hurt, I'd say I accomplished what I wanted quite humanely. Cheers! I hope to eventually have no need for the collar, but for now it stands as a no-bark reminder, and she needs to forget what life was like without it. This product has been a very effective help - easy to use, works long-range, and has a very good battery life. Charged up the collar 4 days ago, and it's still got 50% battery life.
M**H
Works well, not sure how durable it is.
UPDATE I contacted the seller and they promptly agreed to replace the collar. The replacement was delivered quickly. Seemed good at first. It works, and the battery lasted a long time. But now that the collar needs to charge, it won't charge.
D**S
Works so much better than I could imagine
We had a bark collar before. It was a hands off unit, that would escalate based on sensing the dog barking. It would escalate going from a beeping to a vibrate to increasing shocks. The bark collar got left out and the dog chewed it breaking the clasp, so we had to replace it. I needed something to stop our dog from barking when the neighbor lets their dog out. Our dog is a large (48 lbs.) Rottweiler-Labrador mix puppy. He will run to the fence, and bark whenever the neighbor lets their dog out. The situation gets worse as our other dog (older pit bull mix) will 'egg him on,' causing him to bark almost uncontrollably. This bark collar is amazing! It gives me control to beep, vibrate or shock, and it gives control over the level of shock. The first time I used the beep, it immediately got his attention, probably because he remembered from the other collar the beep was the first level. Reinforced with a "NO" command, the beep was very effective first level. If he gets a little out of hand, I can use the vibrate control. This definitely gets his attention, and he will usually back off from the fence. I was able to control and work with him effectively using only these functions for almost two weeks. I wondered if I would ever have to use the shock. One day the opportunity arose. The beep and vibrate did not provide enough stimulus to break him out of his barking frenzy, so I used the shock. The shock level can be set and I had it at 20. It kind of got his attention but he appeared to shrug it off. I increased it to 30 for the next time it would be needed. That did the trick! The next time I had to use the shock (after escalating from beep to vibrate), he IMMEDIATELY stopped and backed away. I have only had to use the shock once since then (I guess he wanted to see if the last shock was a fluke--it wasn't). The shock level could be dialed up to 99. I suppose if you had a bigger dog or your dog had thicker hair you might need higher than mine, but I can't imagine that this wouldn't be able to get ANY dog's attention. I really like the layout of the controller. The beep control is the bottom button. The vibrate control is the button just above it. Then there is a good distance (a whole set of buttons) until the shock control button, and it is the only colored button (orange) so it stands apart and I don't accidentally push it. There is also a lock (slide) controller on the side so that if any controller button is accidentally pressed ( or if little hands get ahold of it) the dog doesn't get accidentally shocked. Both the collar and the controller are rechargeable, using a standard micro USB cable. The collar recharges in less than 4 hours (so overnight) and lasts for days. The controller lasts over a week. There is no reason to turn it off to save charge. I am so thrilled with the performance of this training system. This has been an amazing system and helps the dog find focus when he loses it. I highly recommend this for anyone with a dog who needs correction.
J**.
Very good product for the price!
Perfect e-collar for training. Has beep, vibration and shock correction. Shock correction is adjustable from 0-99. I could barely feel level 10 on the shock correction, and my rescue pup begins to notice the shock at level 15. So, having the shock correction adjustment ability is a big plus depending on the dog. Definitely a great tool to use for training! The controller also has a nice backlit display that shows the charge of both the collar and controller, so there is no guessing how much battery is left. I have ran this collar for almost 2 months now and have only charged it once, so the battery life is very good! The locking feature is also a nice addition to the controller to prevent accidental correction to your pup!
K**L
Love this correction collar! --Updated info--
Update on March 25, 2020: The remote decides to work when it wants. It started about two weeks ago. I turn it on and it flashes and beeps uncontrollably. I'm afraid to put the collar on my dog in fear it will zap him on its own because of it malfunctioning. If it does work, it's only for about an hour then it's back to flashing and beeping. I purchased in June 2019. It's not even a year old. I had to knock 2 stars off because of this. My original review still stands because I wrote it when it was new: Let me start off by sharing what my 8 month old dog is mixed with: Aussie, Lab, cattle dog, and pit. So, 4 crazy breeds mixed into one puppy. He's around 60 pounds and looks like a black and white Aussie with a tail. Cute as a button and the sweetest puppy! I knew what I was in for but, I wasn't ready for the stubbornness! Oh my goodness!!! I was to the point of yelling at him multiple times a day for being a naughty puppy. Correcting him with a soft, firm voice was no longer working. He was a teenager with a teenager attitude! I bought this correction collar! In our house we have specific names for the three correction levels: "beep", "buzz", and "zap". The first day I was only using the beep and a firm "no". Well, that worked the first day. The next day he no longer cared. I had to step up MY game. The next day I added the buzz. I gave him one chance to listen, then the next time he was told "no", he got the buzz. The zap came later. When he was 4 months old he started climbing the fence. (The fence is a really important part of our yard. It keeps the dogs in and most wildlife out.) We bought a tie-out cable to keep him in the yard. He got tangled on everything. It seems he got tangled on air! He could still climb the fence with the tie-out, but couldn't run the neighborhood. When he had the correction collar on and decided to jump the fence, It wasn't any old jump. I think horse jumpers would be impressed with this jump! Score: 15/10. The next time he was ready to jump or stand on the fence, I zapped him. He learned real quick. He now just stands at the fence and looks at his pittie friend instead of trying to jump or climb the fence to go play. While I have so many ways to brag about this correction collar, let me explain how it has worked for my family. Like the correction levels on the collar, we have levels of naughtiness. We use the beep to mainly get his attention or to remind him he's doing something he shouldn't be doing. This includes eating grass, standing on the couch when he should be laying down, sniffing one spot too long on our walks, etc. He gets the buzz when he decides to see if there's anything still worth eating in the trash, playing too rough with the 2 small dogs (I tell him "easy" and buzz at the same time), picking up a shoe or other item he isn't supposed to have, etc. We save the zap for very naughty behavior: standing on the fence, chasing the cat, trying to take ME for a run or drag while on our walks because he sees another dog and wants to play (that was loads of fun). Overall, this correction collar has changed my mind about my dog. I was going to rehome him to a family that had a lot of land for him to run his energy off. I'm so glad I didn't. We have only had this correction collar for about 3 weeks, but it has helped so much. Yes, he still gets into things and doesn't always do what he's supposed to, but he's still a puppy and he's learning. Change can't be expected overnight or in a week. It takes time and patience and work. I recommend this correction collar to owners that have stubborn dogs. I love the 3 levels of correction, that it's RECHARGABLE!, water resistant, easy to use, and the price. 5 stars! Thank you for a great product!
A**Y
Excellent
I have an energetic 7 month old goldador and we live rurally, no fences, with an angry , violent , dog hating neighbor. Wanted to train my puppy to stay away from his property. This thing works wonderfully. Only once have I used the shock mode . She comes with my call now or voice call and a beep. It keeps her by my side in high energy group and dog events. It’s wonderful . Thank you . So recommend .
M**W
Good device
I have a dog that goes crazy around other dogs, and just wants to play. He sees a squirrel, and i've got a runner. He is good at listening and obeys for the most part. However, when he gets outside, all bets are off. As soon as he see's a squirrel, a dog, or even hears another dog in the distance, he does not care what you call him, he is not coming. He will at times stop, and look up at me, we do this stare down, and he then bolts in the opposite direction. I know his spots he likes to go to, so I'll catch up with him, and he is always going crazy barking at some dogs on the other side of their fence trying to play. He will run up and down the length of their fence barking. When I try and intercept long the fence, he becomes the best NFL player in the world, and will run straight at me, then put on some fancy paw-work that fakes me right out of my shoes! So after 20 minutes and the help of 3 kids, I have him in hand again. I figured I might need something more than a pocket of bacon, and a stern look he can see right through. I ordered this device, and I am pretty impressed. The battery life will last several days at least. I have never let it die, but it's been off the charger for 8 days before I needed to put it back on, and even then it was still blinking and working. The device has a beep, vibrate, and shock mode. The beep is a nice warning, and the vibration strength is pretty solid. I have not, and 99% sure WILL NOT use the shock feature. The shock feature is adjustable from 00-99 intensity. I would not put anything like this on my dog without testing it first. Once the battery was fully charged, I placed my index finger on one probe, and middle finger on the other probe. Placed the intensity to 07. I felt nothing. I increased the intensity to 12, and felt a very mild tingling in my fingers. I put the intensity to 25, and I almost needed to be brought back to life. The shock went up one arm, across my check, and was felt through my entire body. I'm 6'4", so I can't image what that would do to a 45 lb. dog. and to image there is another 75 levels higher which should be labeled intense / crazy / ludicrous modes. The collar comes with 2 black rubber tips to put on the probes to make it more comfortable, and reduce the shock power. I retried level 25 with the black rubber tips installed, and there was no difference, it was still shockingly intense. I set the intensity to 00, and when I turn it on the next time, that's where it is still, so accidental shocking. So I put the dog collar on my furry Olympian and waited days for him to mess up so I could send a beep, or my new secret weapon, the vibrate. I waited, and waited with the remote holstered. Finally the day came where my son opened the door and that dog bolted. He ran across the street into the neighbors yard as a short cut to his friends house. He stopped and was smelling something when I arrived on-site. I sternly yelled his name, and pulled a lint covered treat from my pocket. He looked up at me quickly like a deer drinking water, thos was it, we were locked in dreaded stare off. The only thing missing was the cowboy showdown whistle along side the blowing tumbleweed. I stared hard, he licked his nose drawing his tongue down his whiskers. I drew first, aimed, and pulled the trigger. The by standers fell silent and gasped as a faint beep beep beep was heard 50 yards away, they knew he was hit as many looked away in horror. He spun around like the wind to see where that sound came. He stopped cold, shot his glare back at me as he now knew. He then bolted, both ears flopping like tarps in a tornado. But this time he was coming straight back to us and the awaiting lint snack. It was a Christmas miracle in July. Lately he loves to eat the deer antlers I have around my gardens. NO matter what I do, when i'm not watching, he will sneak back over, and start chewing on them. So during a bbq, I noticed he was again, bitting those antler over behind the tomato plants. I first gave him a verbal, his head popped up over the tomato plant, he got up, and walked away, but quickly returned. I said it again, he looked at me this time with his face sideways while he was chomping, taunting me with those big cartoon eyes, I knew it was game ON! I pressed the beep button, and he jumped up and walked away, but again 2 minutes later he returned. I beeped him again, and he got startled, but the taste was just too good, stared at me while devouring my antler... Things just got real, the moment had come to bring out the secret weapon I dubbed the flea flicker. I ordered an all systems go command and received visual clearance. I did a single press of the vibrate button and hit the deck. That dog jumped up from behind the tomato cages like his tail was on fire! He was on the MOVE, and looked just like a bucking bronco. His glare told me that this game was not over.. He did not go near that antler the rest of the night. The next day when he knew I was at work, oh he returned, and this time had a score to settle with that antler. It's still an on-going battle, but I'm gaining a foot hold.. The device works very well, and I think with consistent use for a while, it would train a dog very well. There are some features I wish it had. #1- I wish it was smaller. The pictures make it look small, and it is not small. I'll take measurements when I get home. #2- I wish it had a flashlight. When I let me dog out at night to use the bathroom, sometimes he gets distracted and I have to go look fit him and turn on all the back yard lights. It would be nice to press a button, and it turns on a flashlight LED on his collar, and I can see where he is, or when walking at night for visibility. Other than that, this I am pleased with this device 100%.
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