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The Adafruit DPI TFT Kippah connects a 40-pin TTL TFT display directly to your Raspberry Pi's GPIO header, bypassing the need for an HDMI encoder/decoder. Th...

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The Adafruit DPI TFT Kippah connects a 40-pin TTL TFT display directly to your Raspberry Pi's GPIO header, bypassing the need for an HDMI encoder/decoder. The result is a fast, native 18-bit colour display with full graphics acceleration and instant refresh — the same quality you'd expect from an HDMI connection.

Compatible with Raspberry Pi B+, A+, Pi 2, Pi 3 and Zero, this board works best with 5" and 7" 40-pin TTL TFT displays at 800×480 resolution. Because the display output replaces HDMI/composite, you get a compact, cost-effective setup without any additional video hardware.

Key Features

  • Direct DPI Connection – No HDMI encoder/decoder needed; native GPU-accelerated output
  • 18-Bit Colour – High-quality display output with full graphics acceleration
  • 40-Pin TTL TFT Support – Works with 5" and 7" displays at 800×480
  • HAT Form Factor – Snaps directly onto the Raspberry Pi GPIO header
  • Fully Assembled – Ready to use with software configuration

Specifications

  • GPIO Usage – Pins 2–21 (inclusive) are used by the display
  • Available Pins – GPIO #22, #23, #24, #25, #26, #27 remain free
  • Compatibility – Raspberry Pi B+, A+, Pi 2, Pi 3, Zero
  • OS Support – Tested with Raspbian; other operating systems not guaranteed

Ideal For

  • Compact embedded displays and kiosks
  • Portable Raspberry Pi projects
  • Cost-effective display solutions without HDMI hardware
  • Dedicated single-display applications

Package Contents

  • 1× DPI TFT Kippah circuit board (fully assembled and tested)
Note: This version does not include touchscreen support. TFT display, Raspberry Pi, USB cable, and FPC extension cable sold separately. A soldering iron may be needed to adjust the backlight via a PCB jumper.
Important: This board uses GPIO pins 2–21, leaving only six GPIO pins available. HDMI/composite output is disabled when using the Kippah — both cannot operate simultaneously.

Jargon buster

Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.

encoder
A device attached to a motor or shaft that reports movement, such as rotation steps or position. In a pump system, an encoder can help measure or control how much the motor has turned, which affects how repeatable the watering amount can be.
FPC
FPC stands for flexible printed circuit, a flat flexible cable or connector style often used where space is tight. It matters because this breakout needs the correct pin count and pitch FPC cable to connect reliably to the display or high-speed interface.
GPIO
General-purpose input/output pins are microcontroller pins you can set in software to read signals, switch devices on and off, or connect to peripherals. The number of GPIO pins matters because it limits how many buttons, LEDs, sensors, and other parts you can wire directly to the board.
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.
PCB
A printed circuit board is a rigid board with copper tracks that connect electronic parts without loose wires. For this kit, the PCBs also form the airplane shape, so they are both the circuit base and part of the finished model.
TFT
A thin-film transistor display is a common type of colour LCD used for graphics screens. Knowing a product is for TFTs helps you check that the driver board matches the display’s connector, resolution, backlight, and signalling method.
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