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Adafruit

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The 64×64 RGB LED Matrix Panel with 45° Curb-Cut corners and 2.5mm pitch features 4096 bright RGB LEDs in an ultra-high-density panel. The curb-cut corners a...

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The 64×64 RGB LED Matrix Panel with 45° Curb-Cut corners and 2.5mm pitch features 4096 bright RGB LEDs in an ultra-high-density panel. The curb-cut corners are angled at 45°, allowing multiple panels to be assembled into LED video cubes or rectangular enclosures with seamless edges.

This panel uses a non-standard 5-address (ABCDE) multiplexing system. Many standard drivers only support 4-address (ABCD) setups. Compatible controllers include the RGB Matrix Bonnet for Raspberry Pi, RGB Matrix HAT (both require a solder jumper), and Matrix Portal (jumper required). Arduino shields with the Adafruit library and HDMI driver boards do not support 5-address multiplexing. The SmartLED Shield with Teensy 3.5/3.6 has the hardware for 5-address panels and sufficient RAM, but the power plug must be manually soldered or adapted due to shield overlap.

Key Features

  • 45° Curb-Cut Corners – Angled edges allow panels to be assembled into cubes and rectangular enclosures
  • 2.5mm Pixel Pitch – Ultra-high density for sharp detail at close viewing distances
  • 4096 RGB LEDs – 64×64 resolution with full-colour output
  • 5-Address Multiplexing – ABCDE system for 64-pixel tall panels
  • Chainable – IDC input/output connectors allow multiple panels to be daisy-chained

Specifications

  • Pixel Pitch: 2.5mm
  • Resolution: 64×64 (4096 LEDs)
  • Operating Voltage: 5V
  • Corner Cut: 45°
Warning: This panel uses non-standard 5-address multiplexing (ABCDE). It is not compatible with standard 4-address Arduino shields or HDMI driver boards. Use the RGB Matrix Bonnet or HAT for Raspberry Pi (solder jumper required), Matrix Portal (jumper required), or SmartLED Shield with Teensy 3.5/3.6 (power plug must be manually adapted). Verify your driver board supports 5-address displays before purchasing.

Also Available

Ideal For

  • LED video cubes and rectangular display enclosures
  • Multi-panel installations requiring seamless corners
  • Close-range indoor displays and signage
  • Raspberry Pi projects using the RGB Matrix Bonnet or HAT

Package Contents

  • 1× 64×64 RGB LED Matrix Panel with 45° curb-cut corners (2.5mm pitch)
  • 1× IDC ribbon cable
  • 1× Power cable
Note: You will need to provide a mechanical substrate for the panels to attach to when assembling cubes or enclosures. There may be slight variations between units based on the supplier, but overall shape, functionality, and use remain identical.

Jargon buster

Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.

HDMI
HDMI is a common digital video and audio connection used by computers, media players, and many displays. If a display kit has HDMI input, it is usually much easier to test with a single-board computer because it can act like a normal monitor.
LED
A light-emitting diode (LED) is a small electronic component that emits light when current flows through it in the correct direction. Because it only conducts one way, its polarity matters, and a through-hole LED must be soldered the correct way around to light up.
RAM
RAM (random-access memory) is fast, temporary memory a device uses for working data while it is running; in its common volatile form, its contents are lost when power is removed. Some devices offer a mode that applies settings to RAM only, which is handy for testing changes temporarily because they are not stored permanently and disappear at power-off.
RGB
Short for red, green and blue, the three primary colours of light that are mixed in varying amounts to make a wide range of colours. In electronics RGB can refer to an LED or pixel that blends these three colours, or to a colour signal or interface that carries separate red, green and blue channels.
Shield
An add-on board that plugs into a main controller board to give it extra features such as sensing, motor control or communication. Knowing a product supports shields helps you judge whether it can connect neatly into an existing maker-board setup.
solder jumper
A solder jumper is a small pair or group of pads on a circuit board that can be bridged or cut with solder to change a hardware setting. It matters because changing modes may require careful soldering rather than just changing software.

Related Tutorials

Free guides on learn.littlebird.com.au

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