Pimoroni Launches a Wealth of Raspberry Pi Pico Pack, Base Add-Ons — and Teases a Wi-Fi Pack, Too

From compact displays to RGB LED keypads, and a handy ESP32-powered Wi-Fi adapter, Pimoroni's gone heavy into the Pico ecosystem.

ghalfacree
about 3 years ago Internet of Things

Pimoroni has jumped into the just-launched Raspberry Pi Pico ecosystem with both feet, announcing a raft of add-on boards ranging from RGB keypads to full-color displays — as well as a carrier to add support for its own Breakout Garden solderless hardware platform.

Launched earlier today, the Raspberry Pi Pico is the first product built around the in-house RP2040 microcontroller from Raspberry Pi. Pimoroni, along with Adafruit, Arduino, and SparkFun, already confirmed plans to build its own microcontroller development boards around the same RP2040 chip — but Pimoroni is also launching a surprisingly broad range of add-ons for the Pico itself.

The Pico Explorer is an all-in-one platform for easy experimentation. (📷: Pimoroni)

The first of these is the Pico Breakout Garden Base, which adds six solder-free Breakout Garden ports for sensors, displays, and other external hardware in the company's range. The Pico Omnibus and Pico Decker, meanwhile, accept a Pico and allow the simultaneous use of two or four "packs" — the name chosen by Pimoroni for Pico add-ons that piggyback onto the board - respectively. The Pico Proto, meanwhile, is a proto-board add-on for custom circuit design, while the Pco Explorer Base offers a solderless breadboard along with a 240x240 IPS LCD, two Breakout Garden ports, a buzzer, two half-bridge motor drivers, and four switches.

The company is also launching Pico variants of many of its existing add-on board designs for other platforms: The Pico RGB Keypad Base adds a 4x4 keypad matrix with RGB LED lighting; the Pico Unicorn Pack adds a 7x16 matrix of RGB LEDs and four tactile buttons; the Pico Audio Pack offers an I2S stereo audio output with headphone amplifier; the Pico Scroll Pack has a 7x17 grid of white LEDs with four tactile switches; and the Pico Display Pack adds a 1.14" full-color IPS LCD, four tactile switches, and an RGB LED.

The Pico Wireless Pack uses an ESP32 to give the Raspberry Pi Pico Wi-Fi connectivity. (📷: Pimoroni)

Pimoroni has also confirmed the launch of the Pico VGA Demo Base, designed to showcase the best features of the RP2040 microcontroller. The add-on offers a 15-pin VGA connector for video, I2S and PWM audio outputs, an SD card slot, three user switches, and a reset switch. Finally, the company has teased a Wireless Pack which will give the Raspberry Pi Pico Wi-Fi connectivity and a micro-SD slot via an Espressif ESP32 coprocessor, though has yet to release details on its features and specifications.

More information on the upcoming add-ons, as well as on Pimoroni's own Tiny 2040 minimal RP2040 microcontroller board, can be found on the Pimoroni website.

ghalfacree

Freelance journalist, technical author, hacker, tinkerer, erstwhile sysadmin. For hire: freelance@halfacree.co.uk.

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