Wiretrustee Cancels Its Four-Port Raspberry Pi CM4 NAS Plans, Releases All Designs as Open Source

Planned crowdfunder for the four-bay NAS carrier board canceled owing to the semiconductor shortage — but the concept lives on.

ghalfacree
over 2 years ago HW101

A work-in-progress effort to create a carrier board to turn a Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4 into a four-bay network attached storage (NAS) system has been discontinued by its creator — with the design files now published under a permissive open source license.

Wiretrustee unveiled its SATA carrier board a year ago, having been inspired by experiments maker Jeff Geerling carrier out with the Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4's PCI Express connectivity. "I'm not chasing high IO therefore a limitation of PCIe x1 wasn't a real problem to me," Wiretrustee's Mikhail Bragin wrote at the time. "I still think you could have a decent speed with only one lane especially for my case where I anyway will connect and download/upload files from/to the home network via the internet (mobile mostly)."

Despite demand, the Wiretrustee CM4 NAS is no more — thanks to the global semiconductor shortage. (📷: Wiretrustee)

The small-footprint board accepted any model of Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4 and offers USB, HDMI, and Ethernet connectivity alongside a fan connector, battery-backed real-time clock, microSD slot, and four on-board SATA power and data connectors in a PCB designed to act as a backplane in a NAS housing.

Sadly, while prototypes were created and a Crowd Supply crowdfunding campaign planed, the board fell short of a commercial realization. "There was quite a hype around this board and still we have lots of people waiting for it," Bragin tells Hackster.io of the project.

Full design files have been published under a permissive license, to keep the concept alive. (📷: Wiretrustee)

"Unfortunately we decided to discontinue the project due to semiconductor market situation. And just yesterday I open-sourced the design files under permissive license."

With the crowfunding campaign canceled, Wiretrustee has opened the project to all: The design files for the board, custom heatsink, and chassis have been published to the company's GitHub repository under the CERN Open Hardware License v2 — Permissive. Bragin, meanwhile, has turned his attention to a separate project: A zero-configuration virtual private network system.

ghalfacree

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

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