Pimoroni Inky Frame 4.0″ (Pico W Aboard) – Inky Frame Only
A compact Pico W powered E Ink® photo frame/home dashboard/life organizer with super concentrated seven-color display and wireless connectivity.
Inky Frame 4.0″ features a vibrant E Ink display with 640 x 400 pixels of tightly packed seven color goodness – that’s almost as many pixels as on our 5.7″ Inky Frame, but squished tidily into a smaller footprint. There are five buttons with LED indicators for interacting with the display, two Qw/ST connectors for plugging in breakouts, and a micro SD card slot for storage of capybara photos or other vital files.
Every Inky Frame comes with a pair of sleek little metal legs so you can stand it up on your desk (and a selection of mounting holes if you’d prefer to do something else). There’s also a battery connector so you can power it without annoying trailing wires, and some neato power saving features that mean you can run it from batteries for ages.
Here are some things we reckon this petite Inky would be great for:
💡 An ultra readable, low power consumption home automation dashboard
🖼️ Displaying stylized photos, pop art images, or favorite comic panels.
📊 Showing cute graphs and readouts from local or wirelessly connected sensors
👀 Displaying fascinating data from online APIs.
Pico W x E Ink®
Multi-color EPD displays use ingenious electrophoresis to pull colored particles up and down on the display. The colored particles reflect light, unlike most display types, meaning that they’re visible under bright lights. It takes approximately 30 seconds to refresh the display, so they work best in projects that don’t need constant refreshing.
E-paper is also ultra-low power (EPD displays only consume power while they’re refreshing), and the images on the display stick around for a long time whilst the display is unpowered.
Features
-
Raspberry Pi Pico W Aboard
- Dual Arm Cortex M0+ running at up to 133Mhz with 264kB of SRAM
- 2MB of QSPI flash supporting XiP
- Powered and programmable by USB micro-B
- 2.4GHz wireless
-
4.01″ EPD display (640 x 400 pixels)
- E Ink Gallery Palette™ 4000 ePaper
- ACeP (Advanced Color ePaper) 7-color with black, white, red, green, blue, yellow, and orange.
- Ultra-wide viewing angles
- Ultra-low power consumption
- Dot pitch – 0.135 x 0.135mm
- 5 x tactile buttons with LED indicators
- Two Qw/ST connectors for attaching breakouts
- microSD card slot *
- Dedicated RTC chip (PCF85063A) for deep sleep/wake **
- Fully assembled (no soldering required)
- C/C++ and MicroPython libraries
- Schematic
Inky Frame Only includes
- Inky Frame 4.0″ (with Pico W Aboard)
- 2 x metal legs
Inky Frame + Accessory Kit includes
- Inky Frame 4.0″ (with Pico W Aboard)
- 2 x metal legs
- 3 x AA battery pack
- 3 x AA batteries
- USB micro B cable
- Velcro square for attaching battery pack
- microSD card (16GB)
Software
Our C++/MicroPython libraries include support for the Inky Frame display. You’ll get the best performance using C++, but if you’re a beginner we’d recommend using our batteries included MicroPython build for ease of getting started.
You can draw on the screen using our lightweight PicoGraphics library, which includes functions for displaying text, shapes, and images (plus individual pixels of course), and we’ve provided some examples to get you started.
Inky Frame 4.0″ ships pre-loaded with MicroPython and some fun examples that use the wireless capabilities of the Pico W to display interesting things. To enable Inky Frame to connect to the internet, you’ll need to save a file called secrets.py to the Pico W using Thonny. It should contain the following lines:
WIFI_SSID = “your_ssid_goes_here”
WIFI_PASSWORD = “your_password_goes_here”
To return to the launcher, hold down buttons A and E and tap reset.
MicroPython
- (Learn) Getting Started with Inky Frame
- (Readme) Installing MicroPython
- (Readme) MicroPython FAQs (and troubleshooting)
- Download pirate-brand MicroPython (you’ll want the Inky Frame.uf2)
- MicroPython examples
- PicoGraphics function reference
C/C++
- C examples
- Picographics function reference
Connecting Breakouts
The Qw/ST connectors on Inky Frame make it super easy to connect up Qwiic or STEMMA QT breakouts. If your breakout has a QW/ST connector on board, you can plug it straight in with a JST-SH to JST-SH cable.
Notes
- Board measurements: 102.8 x 96.7 mm (W x H)
- Overall display dimensions: 97 x 69mm (W x H)
- Display usable area dimensions: 86 x 54mm (W x H)
- These ePaper displays work best at an ambient room temperature (above about 15°C, in our unscientific testing). If the screen is cold you might find that the colors don’t refresh correctly.
- Note that it’s not possible to change the color of the purple border on this screen using software, like with some Inky displays.
- * A micro SD card can be added to cache data downloaded over wifi or for logging information before uploading via wireless. It can also be used to preload assets for your user interface. Certain tasks (like decoding a jpeg or downloading a file) require an SD card to be present as they need a large working space and wouldn’t be able to fit entirely in RAM.
- We’ve found Pico-flavoured C++/MicroPython is quite fussy about SD cards so if yours doesn’t work, try another or formatting using FAT. The cards in the Accessory Kit, or our 32GB or 64GB cards will work fine.
- ** Inky Frame’s onboard RTC (Real Time Clock) means it can be put into a super deep sleep mode that only draws about 20uA of power. Inky Frame can turn off the power that drives the Pico W and the display completely. It can be woken back up by the RTC, the front buttons, or the external trigger on the extension header. You can also read the RTC to keep track of the time and date, of course!
- On the expansion header is an external trigger input. if this is transitioned from low to high then Inky Frame will wake up from deep sleep. This lets you add your own wake button or circuit or build Inky Frame into a more complicated system. The external trigger is 3.3V max.
About Pico W Aboard
- Our new Pico W Aboard products come with a built-in Raspberry Pi Pico W. This means you get all the advantages of an RP2040 microcontroller – a speedy fast dual-core ARM processor, a dynamic, growing ecosystem, and a choice of different programming methods to experiment with. Most excitingly though, Pico W has wireless connectivity, so your Pico/RP2040 devices can communicate with each other and the internet! 🌍