There is a detail that almost every field deployment checklist gets wrong.
The instrument is rated to −40°C. The housing is weatherproof to IP68. The data logger has been running in test conditions for eight months without a single missed measurement. The procurement team signed off, the logistics team packed the units, and the research station has been up since October.
Then February arrives. Temperatures drop to −28°C for eleven days straight. The instruments survive — they were designed for this. But the data record has a gap. Eleven days of nothing, right through the coldest stretch of the season.
The cause is not the instrument. It is the battery.
Specifically, it is the fact that "instrument operates at −40°C" and "battery charges at −40°C" are two completely different specifications — and in most deployments, only one of them is true.
