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Building your Pibow 5

2024-02-29 | By Pimoroni

License: See Original Project

Courtesy of Pimoroni

Guide by Pimoroni

This guide will show you how to assemble Pibow Coupé 5 for Raspberry Pi 5. ‎Our Pibow cases are designed to keep your precious Raspberry Pi protected ‎from bumps and bruises, whilst still allowing access to all the ports and ‎connectors.‎

What you'll need

Preparation

Your Pi 5 will need to be naked (without an Active Cooler fitted) to start. If ‎you've already installed your Active Cooler, remove it before starting ‎assembly - you can squeeze the ends of the white plastic bolts on the ‎underside of the Pi with strong fingers or pliers to release them.‎

You may find that you have some little plastic plugs in the smaller connectors ‎on your Pi 5. These are leftovers from the manufacturing process, and we'd ‎suggest removing these now to make sure they don't interfere with the ‎Pibow layers later.‎

Take your Pibow out of its packaging. You should have five different acrylic ‎layers and a baggie with nuts and bolts in. The little diamond-shaped piece of ‎acrylic with a hole in the middle is a tiny wrench to help tighten up the nuts.

layers_1

If you're missing anything or if any of the layers have been damaged in ‎transit, drop a message to our support team and we'll get it sorted.‎

Peel the protective covering off all the acrylic layers. Some of the layers are ‎quite fragile, so be careful when peeling off the film.‎

bottom_2

Stacking the bottom layers (0, 1, and 2)‎

Each layer of your Pibow (apart from the clear top) is labelled with a number ‎at the top-left corner. When correctly assembled, these numbers will be ‎stacked on top of each other and facing upwards.‎

Lay the base layer (layer 0) down on a flat surface - our Rainbow Pibow has a ‎blue base layer but if you have a Ninja or Royale Pibow yours will be clear. ‎Make sure the cutout for the micro-SD card is at the left-hand side and that ‎the '0' is in the top-left corner.‎

The etched logo should be on the top surface.‎

If you have a blue base layer the text should be the right way up and ‎readable (you get secret stealth branding.)

blue_3

If you have a clear base layer the text should be flipped so you can read it ‎from the outside of the case.‎

clear_4

Stack layers 1 (green) and 2 (yellow) on top, with the numbers facing ‎upwards and, in the top left corner.‎

stack_5

stack_6

Placing your Pi

The next step is to place your Pi on top of the layers you've stacked so far. ‎Layer 2 should nestle around the Raspberry Pi, with the micro-SD card slot at ‎the left-hand side.

top_7

Adding layer 3‎

Stack layer 3 on top of your Pi. This layer has a lot of nooks and crannies, so ‎it's worth taking a bit of time to make sure it's sitting in the right place, and it ‎fits round all the little components. If it isn't sitting right, then don't try to force ‎it - a gentle shake or wiggle (of the Pi and Pibow) should get it to lay flat.

layer_8

Fitting the Active Cooler

If you have an Active Cooler, it's time to fit it now (if not, just move on to the ‎next step.)‎

Unpeel the protective film from the cooler's thermal pads and fit it into place ‎on top of your Pi. The cooler's springy bolts will go through a hole on layer 3 ‎and out the bottom of your Pi.‎

Don't plug the cable into the fan connector just yet, we need to add the top ‎layer first.‎

fitting_9

Adding layer 4‎

Layer 4 is the top clear layer, which sits on top of the whole shebang (and ‎around the Active Cooler). Place it on top now - the etched labels should be ‎readable from the top and the 5V 5A label should be over the Pi's USB-C ‎connector.‎

label_10

Securing your Pibow

The final step is to secure your Pibow with the nylon bolts and nuts. Push the ‎bolts through the four holes in the very corners of the Pibow. We like to put ‎the head of the bolt on top and the nut on the bottom, so they act as little ‎feet, but you do you.‎

Screw each of the nuts onto the bolts. You can use the little acrylic wrench to ‎tighten them, or just use your fingers.‎

secure_11

All of the layers of your Pibow should sit flat and flush with each other. If they ‎aren't, then loosen the nuts and bolts, give the layers a little wiggle until ‎things settle, and tighten them back up again. It's also worth checking that ‎you don't have any tiny pieces of acrylic (AKA 'hanging chads') from some of ‎the smaller holes stuck between the layers.‎

You can go ahead and plug in the Active Cooler's fan in now (the fan ‎connector is hiding behind the Pi's USB 2.0 ports.)‎

plug_12

Your Pi is now attractively clad in its Pibow, hoorah!‎

Respect the Power Nubbin

Layer 3 includes a clever mechanism that lets you press the Pi's power ‎button from the outside of the case. For this to work as intended there needs ‎to be a bit of movement in the layer - so if you're having trouble pushing the ‎button, loosen off the bolt at the corner nearest the USB-C port a half turn ‎and try again.

clad_13

That's all folks!

Mfr Part # SC1148
HEATSINK ALUMINUM
Raspberry Pi
Mfr Part # SC1432
SBC 2.4GHZ 4 CORE 8GB PI 5
Raspberry Pi
$251.57
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