The New Orange Pi 4 LTS SBC Swaps Out a Few Parts to Work Around Ongoing Component Shortages

Swapping out a few harder-to-find components, the Orange Pi 4 LTS should be available in larger quantities than its predecessor — or rivals.

Shenzhen Xunlong, creator of the Orange Pi family of single-board computers, has unveiled its latest board design: the Orange Pi 4 LTS, offering much the same specifications as its earlier Orange Pi 4 but with more readily-available components.

The latest entry in the Orange Pi family, which originally launched on the back of the popularity of the Raspberry Pi range of single-board computers, offers some impressive specifications in its compact footprint. The heart of the board is a jauntily-angled Rockchip RK3399, offering two high-performance Arm Cortex-A72 cores and four lower-power Cortex-A53 cores with a maximum speed up to 1.8GHz plus an Arm Mali-T860 graphics processor.

The latest Orange Pi board is a spin on its predecessor, designed to work around component shortages. (📷: Shenzhen Xunlong)

On top of that, Orange Pi has added 4GB of LPDDR4 RAM, optional 16GB eMMC on-board storage expandable via microSD, and gigabit Ethernet plus a combined Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 5.0 radio with external antenna. There are HDMI 2.0a and DisplayPort 1.2-over-USB Type-C video outputs supporting 4k video at 60Hz, plus dual MIPI DSI, two USB 2.0 ports, one USB 3.0 port, and a USB 3.0 Type-C port, and two MIPI CSI camera connectors. There's also a mini-PCI Express (mPCIe) connector for hardware expansion.

In short, it's almost identical to the earlier Orange Pi 4 — but with only 4GB of RAM instead of up to 8GB. Almost, but not quite: The "LTS" suffix, meaning "Long Term Support," indicates the board has been launched to work around shortages in components for the original Orange Pi 4.

The board is nearly, but not quite, equivalent to the earlier Orange Pi 4, but uses more readily-available parts. (📷: Shenzhen Xunlong)

As a result, the previously-mandatory 16GB eMMC chip is now optional, the AP6256 radio module is a CDW 20U5622, the Realtek RTL8211E Ethernet module is a YT8531C, and — oddly — the 40-pin general-purpose input/output (GPIO) header has been replaced with 26-pin version based on the very first Raspberry Pi models.

These changes aside, the Orange Pi 4 and Orange Pi 4 LTS should be identical in performance and compatibility — including using the same customized Android, Debian, and Ubuntu operating system images.

The board, with its optional 16GB eMMC chip, has been listed on Shenzhen Xunlong's AliExpress store at $72.90 plus $4.05 shipping; parts are due to be shipped early next week, the company has confirmed.

ghalfacree

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

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