So you need training collars for your dogs - what kind of dogs, how many do you need, and how big is the area your dogs will roam? These are key questions you need to answer if you want to quickly narrow down your choices. Though many pet owners have more than two dogs, the common trait there (quantity of dogs owned) is probably the only thing common among them. You could have a neighbor, Martha, who’s go four big dogs she loves to take walks with deep in the woods. A co-worker, Junner, has hunting dogs he adores. Mark’s working dogs shouldn’t be doing anything other than being on his farm. For different dogs, there are different needs.
If you go online to shop. you might find out the options or features listed under each model may not be straightforwardly simple. That there are so many options of models of training collars in the first place is part of the complication. So this article was written for you, because you want a quick and easy to grasp intro about training collars, and in the end how to go about choosing a model.
The distance is important ant. A good rule of thumb is to take a distance you assume your dog will be away from you and multiply that by two. The figure you get from that is roughly or approximately the transmission range you need for the remote collar.
If it’s just around 500 meters, maybe less, you need short ranged collars.
Medium is from 500 to 1000 meters. Long range means 1000 meters and above. These are the ranges available for transmitters. Of course it pays to know about the park you’ll be taking your dogs to, the yard in your property, or the woods you’ll them hunting in.
Transmission range, mind you, is only one factor.
All weather, all terrain toughness. For those who have sheep or work dogs, the may want some ruggedness with their equipment - in both the collars and the transmitters. The last thing you want is to accidentally drop the transmitter, for example, and realize it doesn’t work anymore after that. The same should go with the collars - dogs can get rowdy or bump into trees or rocks while in the woods, or slosh in mud and run under rain - you want a collar that’s all terrain and all weather. So choose a model that’s water-resistant, with a long battery life, and which can get through some rough handling. Along with ruggedness is another features - indicators. You want a battery indicator for the transmitter and the collars, so can tell if you need to charge them, and call the dogs back in before the batteries run out. Also, the good models also tell you how far the dogs are from you. This comes handy when you want to know if the dogs are moving away from you and therefore outside transmission range.

