Gear
Battery & Power for Utah Lake Carp (Phone, Lights, Tournament Day)
Simple power planning for long Utah Lake carp sessions: phone, headlamps, radios, and optional sonar — with Amazon links for power banks, 12V batteries, and waterproof charging.
What drains batteries fastest
- Cold mornings + wind (screens and headlamps run brighter)
- Photos/video (tournament documentation adds up)
- GPS/maps + messaging (finding access points / coordinating teams)
- Running lights/headlamps for rigging in low light
If you only solve one thing: keep the phone alive. It’s your camera, map, weather, and emergency contact.
Simple tournament-day power plan
- 1 power bank per person (10,000–20,000mAh, USB‑C PD).
- Short, durable cable (less tangles, fewer failures).
- Dry bag/pouch so you can charge while it’s blowing sideways.
- If you’re using a boat battery: add a 12V → USB‑C PD adapter.
Amazon picks (search links)
These are Amazon search links filtered by common specs and reputable brands. Focus on reliability and weather resistance.
1) Power banks (phones + small electronics)
- 20,000mAh USB‑C PD power bank (reputable brand)
- Compact 10,000mAh power bank (lighter for short sessions)
2) Cables + keep-it-dry
- Short durable USB‑C cable (1ft)
- Small dry bag / electronics dry pouch
- Waterproof phone pouch + lanyard (keeps it on you)
3) 12V options (boats / optional sonar)
If you’re running electronics off 12V (boat battery or a dedicated pack), this keeps charging simple.
Pro tip for tournaments: put your spare battery kit in the same place every time. The worst time to “dig for a cable” is when the wind is howling and you’re trying to get fish documented fast.
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