Power is boring until it is not. Then it becomes the only thing you can think about. Batteries fail quietly and always at the worst possible time. A gateway that hummed on the bench will go dark on night two if you treated the spec sheet like gospel.

I am not a pro reviewer. I tinker. I like taking gadgets into the field and seeing what breaks first. Lately I have been spending time with a Pulse Pack-style battery and a few small, rugged bits from SpecFive. This piece is practical: small habits and basic math that stop power from turning a field day into a long night. No hero stories. Just things you can do the next time you pack a crate.

Why power is the hard problem

On paper a capacity number looks tidy. In the field you get cold, cable losses, charging inefficiencies, and someone plugging in a phone because they need a light. The result is always the same. Your runtime estimate was optimistic.

Treat specs as a starting point, not a promise. Build margins and give your crew a few deterministic checks they can run with a headlamp and numb fingers.

Two rules that save most deployments

If you take only two rules into the field, make them these.

Plan for half the bench runtime — If a pack promises 24 hours in lab conditions, plan on roughly 12 in the field. Expect worse in cold weather. Bench tests rarely include real telemetry bursts or topology churn. Halving the advertised runtime gives you a buffer that actually matters.

Conservative beaconing while moving, burst on site — When you are moving, make nodes talk as little as possible. Keep beacon intervals long and payloads tiny. Once the kit is down and the antenna is up, flip to a higher cadence for situational awareness. That small habit keeps batteries alive for when you really need position and SOS traffic.

How to calculate runtime — do the math

Don’t guess. Do this arithmetic before you leave.

  1. Estimate average power draw in watts. Example: gateway 2 W, two handhelds 1 W, SBC 1 W = 4 W total.
  2. Multiply for mission length. For 48 hours: 4 W × 48 h = 192 Wh.
  3. Add inefficiencies. Allow 30 percent for wiring loss, BMS overhead, and conversion: 192 × 1.3 = 249.6 Wh.
  4. Apply the conservative rule. Double that to account for real conditions: about 500 Wh.
  5. Pick a pack slightly above your need and remember ageing reduces capacity.

A five minute spreadsheet beats a midnight scavenger hunt.

Pre-deploy battery checklist

Put this on a laminated card in the case lid. Train people to run it every time.

This three to five minute ritual catches most annoyances.

Conservative beaconing: practical settings

Beaconing is the biggest energy drain for many nodes. Sensible defaults work.

Make transit versus site modes obvious. A physical switch or a one-line menu prevents accidental high-frequency beacons.

Charging, solar, and expectation management

Solar looks like a solution until a cloud arrives. Treat solar as a top-up unless you can deploy big panels and reliable sun.

If you run solar:

For continuous off-grid ops, plan battery rotation. Have a charged spare and a swap plan. A fresh pack on the next vehicle saves the day.

Cold weather and the BMS

Cold steals capacity silently. Expect 20 to 40 percent usable loss in low temps.

If SOC readings wander, recalibrate on the bench and mark the pack for maintenance.

Small parts and connectors — design for hands

The most expensive field fix is a trip for a tiny adapter.

Carry a tiny spares kit: one spare battery if possible, an N-type adapter, some dielectric grease, and a handful of fuses.

Logging and telemetry that help

Don’t push huge logs over thin links. Shape the data by priority.

Let mission priorities decide what travels first.

Field drills and expectations

Short drills beat panicked fixes.

Make the rituals boring. Boring wins.

Final thoughts

Power is not glamorous. It is math and habit. Want your gateway to survive a long deployment? Do the arithmetic, overprovision a little, and teach your team two small rituals. Pre-deploy health checks and conservative beaconing change a lot of field outcomes.

If you want, I can turn the pre-deploy checklist into a printable two-sided card sized to fit a case lid. Laminate it, stick it down, and you will stop the midnight scavenger hunts.