Arizona ag operators are managing more acres with fewer people, in more heat, across longer distances. Razor Tracking is a fleet GPS and asset management system built to close that gap: know where everything is, get alerted when something moves that shouldn't, and have the data to run your operation tighter every season.
Why Arizona Ag Operations Need Fleet Tracking
Farm equipment theft is a growing problem across the Southwest. A combine, sprayer, or trailer left unattended overnight in a remote Yuma Valley field is a significant exposure. Beyond theft, the real day-to-day cost for most operators is wasted time: not knowing where a piece of equipment is, sending someone to check on a machine that hasn't moved, or losing hours during a tight harvest window because a trailer was in the wrong field.
Razor Tracking connects to your equipment and reports location, movement, and status back to your phone or computer in real time. You see your entire fleet on one map, set alerts for after-hours movement or geofence exits, and run reports on utilization across your operation. For ag operations in Pinal County, the Yuma Valley, or the Imperial Valley, where fields are spread across miles and labor is tight, that visibility is operational leverage.
Razor Tracking has a native integration with CNH equipment, including Case IH and New Holland tractors, combines, and sprayers sold at Bingham Equipment. That means your fleet data works with the machines you already run, without adapters or workarounds.
What Ag Operators Use Razor Tracking For
Harvest Fleet Coordination
Track combines, grain carts, and chase tractors across multiple fields in real time. Know exactly where each machine is during harvest so you can coordinate handoffs and eliminate downtime between loads.
Theft Detection and Recovery
Set geofences around your fields and storage yards. Get an instant alert if any tracked asset moves after hours or exits its designated area, so you can respond immediately rather than discovering a loss the next morning.
Equipment Utilization Reports
Run reports on engine hours, idle time, and field utilization across your entire fleet. Identify underused equipment before your next lease renewal and document usage for insurance, tax, or loan purposes.
Operator and Contractor Oversight
During planting and harvest season when you're running seasonal operators or custom harvesters, Razor Tracking gives you independent confirmation that the right equipment is in the right field, running the right hours.
Maintenance Scheduling
Track actual engine hours on every machine and set alerts when service intervals approach. Catch deferred maintenance before it becomes a field breakdown during your harvest window, when every hour counts.
Remote Field Monitoring
Check on irrigation equipment, stored trailers, or unattended implements at remote field locations without driving out. Confirm a machine arrived safely, hasn't been moved, and is where it needs to be for tomorrow.
Tracker Devices for Harvesting Fleets
During harvest, you're running some of your highest-value equipment in your most time-sensitive windows. Razor Tracking offers multiple device options that work across your combine, grain cart, tractor, and trailer assets, so you get complete fleet visibility on a single dashboard during your busiest days of the year.
The four core Razor Tracking device types each solve a different monitoring problem across your ag fleet. The right setup for most Arizona operations uses a mix of hardwired, solar, and asset trackers depending on whether the equipment has a power source, how often it moves, and how critical real-time updates are for that specific asset.
Razor Tracking Products for Agriculture
Bingham Equipment carries the full Razor Tracking lineup. Here's how each product fits into an ag operation, and which applications it's best suited for.
Pro GPS Tracker
A hardwired, always-on GPS tracker that draws power directly from the machine. Best for high-value powered equipment you want tracked continuously: tractors, combines, sprayers, and self-propelled implements.
View Pro GPS TrackerElite Dash Camera
A GPS-integrated dash camera combining location tracking with video recording. Ideal for grain cart tractors, field trucks, and any cab-equipped machine operated by seasonal or custom operators.
View Elite Dash CameraSolar Hybrid Tracker
A self-charging tracker that uses a solar panel to maintain battery charge. Ideal for implements, trailers, and equipment without a reliable power source. Arizona's solar conditions make this especially practical.
View Solar Hybrid TrackerPremier GPS Tracker
An advanced hardwired tracker with expanded data reporting and integration capabilities. Best for large mixed fleets where detailed utilization reporting and CNH integration are priorities.
View Premier GPS TrackerAT230 Asset Tracker
The AT230 is a compact, battery-powered asset tracker for equipment with no power source: parked implements, anhydrous tanks, portable bins, grain augers, and irrigation equipment. It updates location at configurable intervals and alerts you on movement, making it your most cost-effective theft deterrent for lower-priority assets.
View AT230 Asset Tracker7 Ways to Prep Your Razor Tracking System Before Planting Season
A lot of ag operations install Razor Tracking and then don't fully use it until something goes wrong. Spending 30 minutes before planting season to review and update your setup pays off throughout the season.
- Verify Devices: Confirm every tracker is reporting current location and that battery or power status is healthy before equipment leaves the yard.
- Add New Fleet Vehicles: Any equipment purchased since last season should have a tracker installed and added to your account before first use.
- Equipment Review: Walk your fleet and confirm device mounting is secure. Vibration over a season can loosen connections on hardwired units or shift solar panel angles on solar trackers.
- Set Up Alerts and Reports: Configure geofences for your fields and storage yards. Set after-hours movement alerts and schedule weekly utilization reports.
- Razor Training: Walk new operators through the app so more people on your team can pull up the fleet map and read alerts.
- Map Review: Confirm your field boundaries and geofences are accurate. Fields that were added or expanded need updated boundaries.
- Other Fleet Needs: Identify any assets that aren't currently tracked but probably should be, especially high-value implements or equipment stored at remote locations.
Our equipment specialists can help you select the right Razor Tracking devices for your fleet, get devices installed, and walk through initial account setup. Contact any Arizona location to get started, including Yuma, Casa Grande, and Lakeside.
