I would guess that the NZ Police would know the answer to this, they must need to track cell phones as part of their job.

Perhaps you could report the buoy as missing, maybe mention that it is marking something valuable dropped at sea, they may be able to locate it for you.


On 21/07/2016 12:00 p.m., Travis Baird wrote:

Hi everyone.

I am posting here as a last resort and this isn't really relevant to to this group, but more than anything I am hoping someone here may have some more knowledge about cellular technology than me. I have a customer that has lost a fairly expensive Buoy off the cost of Otago and it's GPS has stopped working. Vodafone have confirmed they are still seeing it connected to their cell tower (2G only) but the Vodafone helpdesk people aren't particularly helpful when we start asking them about options for finding a rough location at sea so we have an idea where to look for it.

Does anyone know if it's possible to triangulate a location of a cellular device these days? Is there a cutoff distance from the tower that the device will no longer be able to connect (e.g. if there is this helps narrow the search area at least)? Does anyone have an contact details for someone at VF that might be able to help?

If anyone has any info that might help, please contact me off list.

Thanks in advance.

Regards

--
Travis Baird | Managing Director
Unifone NZ ltd
a. 7 Kitchener St, Dunedin
e. travis@unifone.net.nz
m. 029 763 8911
t. 03 974 8233

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