Training – Petsafe Innotek Cabela’s Gun Dog Remote Trainer User Manual
Page 14

Cabela’s
®
Gun Dog
®
— Owner’s Manual
14
TRAINING
Always start training your dog with the
lowest stimulation, and increase to a
higher level only if necessary. You will
know when you’ve reached the right
level when your dog responds by
twitching his head, neck, or shoulders,
or by perking up his ears. If the dog
vocalizes, you need to go to a lower
level.
When using GS-7000’s C
Co
on
nttiin
nu
uo
ou
us
s
s
sttiim
mu
ulla
attiio
on
n button, you control the
duration of the stimulation by the length
of time you press the stim button. For a
short stimulation, press and release the
button. For a longer stimulation, hold the
button down. A maximum of 10
seconds of stimulation may be applied
before the safety lockout feature ((o
ovve
err--
s
sttiim
mu
ulla
attiio
on
n p
prro
otte
ec
cttiio
on
n,, s
se
ee
e b
be
ello
ow
w)) starts.
When using GS-7000’s M
Mo
om
me
en
ntta
arryy
s
sttiim
mu
ulla
attiio
on
n button, each Momentary stim
button press produces one short, quick
stim at the Receiver collar (also called
Nick stimulation or Brief-tap stimulation).
Release the Momentary stim button and
press it again to deliver another
momentary stim.
Over-Stimulation Protection
The Transmitter can transmit
continuously (Tone or Stim) for up to 10
seconds. If you attempt to transmit
continuously for more than 10 seconds,
the transmitter enters a 10 second
lockout mode during which time no
transmissions are allowed (hence, no
stimulation allowed).
Training Tone Option
The Tone button causes the collar to
produce a sound. No stimulation is
delivered when the Tone button is
pressed. The tone continues for as long
as the button is held down, up to 10
seconds. A tone can help strengthen a
dog’s response to training. The tone can
be used as a warning tone prior to
pressing the stimulation button; or can
be a reward tone when presented with
praise, play, or food for good behavior.
The use of a training tone is optional. Its
use varies among popular training
methods. Some trainers choose to use
the tone option as a warning tone prior
to stimulation, others prefer to use the
tone option as a reward tone, and still
others prefer to not use it at all. It is
imperative for successful dog training to
use the tone option consistently through-
out the training process. Whether the
tone will mean reward or warning to your
dog is up to the training method yyo
ou
u
c
ch
ho
oo
os
se
e.
Remember: the training tone
CANNOT be both a warning tone
and a reward tone. To learn more about
tone training, consult a qualified dog
training professional.
To program the GS-7000 Transmitter for
Tone operation, see
Program the Stim
Type (Tone Option) on page 7.