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Cube Tracker Key Finder Locator Smart Bluetooth Tracker Tag: Key Tracker for Car Keys, Wallet Tracker, Remote Finder Luggage Tracker, Item Finders Waterproof Tracking Devices +App, Replaceable Battery

  • Based on 8,163 reviews
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Features

  • Attach CUBE to anything and use CUBE Tracker App to find your Item fast
  • Taking family photos? Use CUBE as a shutter button for your phone camera
  • Lost your Phone? Use your CUBE to locate your phone with ring, vibrate, and flash, even if the app is not running
  • No need to replace CUBE each year. Just replace battery yourself once a year. Extra battery included
  • Simple CUBE Tracker app will show last known location on a map, uses bluetooth to tell if you are near or far, press find and CUBE will ring. Also has a separation alarm to alert you if you left something behind.

Product Dimensions: 1.5 x 0.25 x 1.5 inches


Item Weight: 0.388 ounces


Item model number: C7001


Batteries: 1 CR2 batteries required. (included)


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


OS: Android/Android 4.4/iOS/iOS 7


Connectivity technologies: Bluetooth


Other display features: Wireless


Manufacturer: Cube Tracker


Date First Available: August 28, 2015


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Good device but understand the technology first before you set your expectations
If you read others reviews, you will see "this broke after an update", "this disconnects", "this randomly chirps", "the range is too short/long", "this is too quiet", etc. Well I had this for a half a day and figured out explanation for most of the issues. First, you need to understand bluetooth technology. To simplify this example, take a piece of graph paper and color in the center square. This represents your phone. The paper represents the bluetooth range of your phone. Place a penny on the paper, this represents "the cube". Every few moments, the cube checks the signal strength of the phone and the phone checks the signal strength of the cube (think a check to make sure the penny is on the paper). If the strength is too low (penny off the paper), and you have your cube app setup right, the phone and cube will make noise and the map on the app will show the LAST place the signal strength between the devices was good and in contact with each other. To address "This broke after update" - no it didn't. This cube does not have the power of a tablet, it is a very low power device and takes a moment (45 seconds???) to complete the update. It works still To address "This disconnects" - this may be related to either a weak battery on the cube or your phone. A lot of phones, to save its battery life, will shutdown apps or put the phone into sleep mode. This might be the cause of disconnects. I can't say this for all phones but on my Galaxy S8+, I had it disconnect from a cube 10' away. I clicked "find" on the phone and nothing happened, I clicked the button on the cube and the phone didn't ring. I rebooted the phone and things started to work. But on my phone (under battery in settings), I have a section called "Unmonitored apps" which when an app is added to this list, can use all of the power it wants unrestricted. I have not had a disconnect yet. To address 'This randomly chirps" - if the signal is too low or interrupted. I suspect that this occurs when people do not have the CUBE NOTIFICATION enabled. This setting ensures that the cube app is always running. Phones have limited resources, especially on lowered end phones and with people using a lot of apps/games. People do not realize that apps continue to run even if you change to another app. There are apps that help clean apps that "aren't in front", but that is another topic. But back to what I was saying about resources. When the phone is loading Facebook, then starts up Angry Birds, then Messenger, et al.... The operating system of the phone must make room for the current app to run. This means it has to (temporarily) push out the least used active app out of memory then recall it back later. When this happens, the cube app not running for the moment or running optimally. I believe, this event causes the chirp because it experienced signal lose due to running very slowly. To address "The range is too short/long" - You really need to understand bluetooth, its frequency, and the environment. Bluetooth is a short range radio transmission. It uses the 2.4 Ghz frequency to communicate back and forth between the cube and the phone. Now other devices also use the 2.4 Ghz frequency. Cordless house phones, microwaves, wifi routers, wireless monitoring devices (baby monitors)...just to name a few. Think of a room called "Room 2.4", you and a friend walk into. being the only 2 people in there, you can walk away from each other at a far distance and hold a conversation. Now add 2 more people (wireless house phone and its base). You now are talking on top of each other but still can understand each other but not as far. This is what they call "Signal to Noise Ratio". Now add more people (wifi, baby monitors, microwaves) to the room. It is very difficult to talk to your friend at a distance with a room full of people talking to each other. Now to add more complexity, put a maze in this room. The distance you can talk to your friend is reduced. This maze example is the walls in a house between your phone and the cube. To address "This is too quiet" - I think it gives ample amount of sound but realize, the devices runs on a watch battery and its "speaker" is about the radius of a dime and thinner than a dime. To make this louder, either the cube will need to be redesigned to be bigger to house a larger speaker - or - use a lot more battery at a faster rate, depleting its energy faster. To make a simple example with made up values, lets say each time the cube plays a tune, it eats up 1 percent of the battery life. So 100 tunes, the battery is dead. To make this 3 times louder, it can play a tune 33 times before the battery is dead. So I think, since there is no volume control on the cube, a compromise for battery life was done. Extend the battery life by making the cube play at "almost" 100 decibels but also use the phone and its "range meter" for locating the cube. For people asking "can I use this to track my cat/child?" - it is NOT a Mission Impossible tracking device where you can follow a dotted line to where the cat/child is now. It will alert when they run outside of the range (penny off graph paper) but you have no idea which direction they ran. Th map on your phone will show last known good signal between the cube and phone, not where it is running off to. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2018 by BigDaddyCool68

  • It has tested out just fine, but you have to understand how they work.
This week I lost my keys by somehow putting them into a chip bag that then went into the outside garbage can. Luckily, it wasn't garbage day. For two days I tore my house apart looking for them. I was frantic because the key FOB for my car was on the ring along with my house keys. When you don't know where you lost your keys, good security sense says that you have to prepare for the possibility that some one has them that may want to break into your home or steal your auto. You just can't know otherwise. That would have cost me $350 for reprogramming my cars electronic locking system, the remaining FOB and the new one. I would have had to re-key all of my home doors and mailbox. I would have been out upwards of $500 if my wife hadn't had the thought that Mr. Magoo may have mindlessly tossed 'em in the trash and gone "dumpster diving". This was the worst and most stressful "near miss" I've had. Usually, I find the keys in one of the 3 or 4 places that I usually "lose" them in. But, not always...and each time is a hassle. So, I started looking at key finder technology. I found a lot of companies make these things and began searching for reviews. Without a doubt, the most well received unit is the Tile. But, they last for a year before their battery dies and the battery cannot be replaced! Tile will sell you new ones at a discount, but I'm not one to be tied to a company's cash register just because of a battery. Each of the other key finder products had their share of good and bad reviews, but I chose The Cube. Let me tell you what happened then. After ordering, but before receiving The Cubes, I had already installed the app on three devices..two smart phones and a Samsung Tablet. A short time ago, The Cube could only be used on one device. That has changed. I had already created a Cube login so that I could see my devices on The Cube's web page and I had logged on with each of my three devices before the two Cubes arrived (one for my wife and one for me). When The Cubes got to my home, I associated them both with my wife's phone and then tested them. I then turned on my phone and tablet, opened The Cube's app and voila!...there they were...no extra hassle. I tested them with each device and they worked. I rang each of The Cubes, used each of them to ring the phones and tablet and used them as a remote shutter release to take photos with on my devices. There are some things you'll want to know about how they work. They only associate with one device at a time. If my Cube is associated on my cell phone, when my wife looks at The Cube's app on hers, it tells her that my Cube is in use on my phone. She cannot ring my Cube. It can only be done from my phone. But...if I turn my Bluetooth off on my phone, take my phone out of Bluetooth range or turn it off, within a minute or so, my Cube automatically affiliates with her phone. Now, she can ring my Cube and find it if it is lost. I did have one of The Cubes "disconnect" from a phone once with no apparent reason. The Cube was actually touching my phone. I think the Bluetooth receiver may have been "swamped" by the transmitter in the phone. This is a not uncommon radio occurrence. When I separated the two, my phone found the Cube within a minute or so. It was not instantaneous. This is important, because if you loose your keys while your phone is distant from The Cube, they will be disconnected. As you look for the keys, you need to proceed slowly so that the two have time to reconnect. Also, some folks complained about The Cube's volume. It isn't screeching, but it will audible unless the surroundings are quite loud. Also, the little button on the unit lights up when it goes off in the even that you're looking for it in the dark. I think the update when I affiliated The Cubes to my device apps may have fixed a lot of what others may have complained about. One, each unit can now be used with different devices, although not simultaneously. The Cubes now have a network so that others can find your lost item if you report it to "The Cube Community" through the app. I've been testing these things all day and they seem to perform as advertised. And, next year when the battery dies, I'll simply use the little tool that came with The Cube to open the case and insert the spare battery that also came with it. If I discover anything not to like, I'll update this. Today is July 14, 2018. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 15, 2018 by rick

  • Not made to last
The main problem is that it will not be useful for long. I purchased 2 of them and both lasted around a year. This key finder will break around the key ring area and you will not be able to use as a key finder. I did make this product useful afterwards by putting broken key finder in my eye glass case. I’m always looking for my reading glasses! I would look for a key finder constructed with mettle around key ring area. Hope someone finds this review helpful. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 13, 2023 by Sammy H

  • Not the timesaver I was hopnig it would be
Took a bit of effort to get the item to pair with my phone, then a bit to get it to finally take a firmware update. Every time I've needed to find the tag, my phone says the device is out of range, for at least 5 to 10 minutes. Then either it can connect and make it ring, or I find the tag on my own, and it was only 20 ft away. Comes with a spare battery, which is nice. I used it a handful of times and the battery it came with was dead after 27 days. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 29, 2023 by Thomas Leman

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