Park has developed a device that shows the part in the photo but can’t use it, particularly with rotating images on the display. This is the best Raspberry Pi project for you. I’m thinking of sharing a build guide with Adafruit. Thanks to the Stemma QT port, adding new features with additional modules would be more than feasible. Photo 1 of 3 p.m. Image 2 of 3 – 1:28. The picture 3 is taken by my daughter. The Pip-Boy is made of 3D-printed shell that uses threaded inserts and screws to hold everything together to make a solid, professional finish. This retro-looking display has a rounded rectangle TFT IPS module from Adafruit. It’s controlled using an Adafruit Feather RP2040 and an Joy FeatherWing module that includes a D-Pad, Joystick, Select button and a Reset button that can be used by the user. A remastered Feather Wip Mini Kit and two other devices, offers protoboard support for Feather modules and uses it to switch to a power switch. Logic’s latest slugboxes can run in lithium-ion batteries. If software is able to manage this image, the realism is done using a CircuitPython script. It accepts users input and change the display output. To take a closer look at this Pip-Boy project, click on the original thread posted on Twitter by John Edgar Park and find him some more cool creations.