Anker Prime Power Bank, 26,250mAh 3-Port Portable Charger
June 10, 2026 |
Bob's Quick Take: This Anker Prime 26K power bank is a serious portable charging upgrade for road trips, RV travel, campground weekends, and anyone who carries phones, tablets, cameras, or even a USB-C laptop. It offers big capacity and fast multi-device charging in a packable size, but it is more tech-heavy and more expensive than a basic phone charger. Best for campers who want dependable camp-tech power without jumping all the way to a full portable power station.
AstroAI AIRUN H Tire Inflator Portable Air Compressor
June 23, 2026 |
Bob's Quick Take: The AstroAI AIRUN H is a compact 12V tire inflator made for drivers who want a simple way to top off car, trailer, bike, or gear tires during road trips and campground travel. It plugs into a vehicle outlet, includes a digital pressure gauge and LED light, and is easy enough for beginners to keep in the car. The main caution: it is not cordless, maxes out at 100 PSI, and should not be treated like a heavy-duty shop compressor.
FosPower NOAA Emergency Weather Radio A1
June 16, 2026 |
Bob's Quick Take: The FosPower NOAA Emergency Weather Radio A1 is a practical camp, RV, road trip, and home-preparedness radio with AM/FM/NOAA weather access, a hand crank, solar panel, USB charging, AAA battery backup, flashlight, reading light, SOS alarm, and a small emergency power bank. Bob likes it as a simple “just in case” item for families and beginner campers who want weather updates and backup light without overcomplicating the gear bin. The caution: treat the phone-charging feature as emergency backup only, not as your main power source.
General Medi 2-in-1 First Aid Kit
June 16, 2026 |
Bob's Quick Take: The General Medi 2-in-1 First Aid Kit gives campers, road trippers, and families a practical stash of basic first-aid supplies in one main kit, plus a smaller mini kit for day trips or backpacks. It is a smart fit for car camping, RV travel, family camping weekends, and emergency-ready vehicles. Bob likes the grab-and-go convenience, but cautions that every first-aid kit should be checked, restocked, and customized before heading outdoors.