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Unless water clarity is great in your area I recommend not getting a camera. Most people have unrealistic expectations to how far a camera can see.
I love my camera and I fish in dirty water. I set it up so it's pointed at my lure. I'm not expecting to see out 10-20 feet. Nothing more entertaining than watching a northern sniff the lure and enticing him to bite.
I don't disagree with you but most seem to purchase a camera thinking 10-20ft is realistic and then complain about the camera when they meet reality
I have a float suit and I'm happy with the boots I have. Only a couple years old and haven't had cold feet yet.
The day may well arrive when the thought "What more should I add?" will be replaced with "What can I leave behind?". I've got at least four grand tied up in ice fishing paraphernalia, augers, flips, electronics, heaters, sleds, suits and all the miscellaneous stuff that seemed like such a great idea when acquired over the course of forty years plus on the ice. Three quarters of it has been sold, given away, or bone piled and I'm still trying to get free from more and more every year. Very little of it actually made me a better fisherman or put more fish on the ice. Creature comforts are nice until that age when gravity starts getting real mean. My drill auger would rate as most valuable component.
Unlike a few people in this thread, I love my camera. Helps me identify structure and fish species. I don't go out without it and added a full size camera for this year.I have the Aqua Vu Micro Revolution Pro and with the cable reel it is so quick to drop down the camera and scout that it's ridiculous.