Ensuring Safety in the World’s Most Demanding Work Environments.
TrackLone provides 24/7 visibility of miners and contractors, detects falls or no-motion events, and ensures compliance with and adherence to site safety protocols
Core Safety Features of {{TrackLone}}
Operational safety challenges that demand real-time solutions
Protect. Respond. Comply.
Man Down Alert
If a worker falls or collapses, TrackLone instantly detects the impact and sends an automatic alert, so you know something’s wrong even when they can’t call for help.
SOS Two way call
With one press of the SOS button, the device alerts supervisors and opens a live two-way call, letting you hear what’s happening and respond immediately.
No Motion Detection
When a worker stays unusually still, maybe due to injury or unconsciousness, the device triggers a no-motion alarm, giving you critical early warning.
Smart Checks-ins & Geofencing
Workers can check in at job sites with a tap, while geofencing notifies you when they enter or leave risky zones, keeping attendance and safety fully automated.
{{Inside TrackLone:}} A Safety Solution for High-Risk Mining Environments
Mining and metal operations push workers into unpredictable, high-risk conditions where visibility drops, communication fails, and response time becomes the difference between rescue and tragedy. Underground tunnels, steep high-walls, blast zones, gas pockets, and remote exploration sites make it nearly impossible for supervisors to know where their teams are, or if they are safe.
In conditions like these, a mining worker safety device becomes absolutely necessary. TrackLone is a mining worker safety device and a lone worker safety solution that is purpose-built for real mining conditions. TrackLone gives real-time visibility, automated risk detection, and direct communication when conditions change
With instant SOS alerts, continuous location monitoring, fall and man-down detection, and strict geofence controls, TrackLone tracks workers and protects them. Every notification, route log, and safety trigger reflects the operational demands of mines that run 24/7 in volatile environments.
TrackLone is a mine-safety system built with two core components: a wearable device for workers and a real-time multi-admin dashboard for supervisors. The device includes fall and man-down sensors, GPS tracking, geofence alerts, and SOS two-way calling, engineered to withstand harsh underground conditions. The dashboard provides live location visibility, instant alerts, shift logs, and device health status, giving supervisors complete situational awareness. Together, they keep miners protected and connected even when traditional communication fails
Critical Risks Mining Lone Workers Encounter {{Every Day}}
High-risk zones and limited visibility
Manual incident response delays rescue.
Compliance pressure under DGMS standards.
What TrackLone Delivers for Your {{Mining Teams}}
70% faster emergency response.
Digital safety logs for DGMS audits.
Improved rescue coordination visibility.
Increased miner confidence & accountability.
Real-time tracking systems when used in mining can reduce emergency response times from traditional 15–30 minutes to as little as 2–5 minutes by automating alerting and giving exact worker locations instantly. This dramatically improves rescue outcomes in confined underground environments.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Find quick answers to common questions about connected safety and lone worker monitoring
More FAQs
What safety equipment is required for mining workers?
Mining workers typically use helmets, gas detectors, proximity warning systems, self-rescue breathing devices, high-visibility clothing, and communication trackers to reduce injury and fatality risks.
What is a proximity detection system in mining safety?
Mining workers typically use helmets, gas detectors, proximity warning systems, self-rescue breathing devices, high-visibility clothing, and communication trackers to reduce injury and fatality risks.
How do gas detection devices protect miners?
Mining workers typically use helmets, gas detectors, proximity warning systems, self-rescue breathing devices, high-visibility clothing, and communication trackers to reduce injury and fatality risks.
What is a self-contained self-rescue device used in mines?
Mining workers typically use helmets, gas detectors, proximity warning systems, self-rescue breathing devices, high-visibility clothing, and communication trackers to reduce injury and fatality risks.
Why are wearable safety devices important in mining?
Mining workers typically use helmets, gas detectors, proximity warning systems, self-rescue breathing devices, high-visibility clothing, and communication trackers to reduce injury and fatality risks.
Ready to Build a Safer Workplace?
See how TrackLone can protect your workforce and improve safety outcomes