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· MPN: DFR1107

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The Arduino GIGA Display Shield is a touchscreen add-on designed for the Arduino GIGA R1 WiFi. Featuring a 3.97" TFT display with 480×800 resolution and 5-po...

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The Arduino GIGA Display Shield is a touchscreen add-on designed for the Arduino GIGA R1 WiFi. Featuring a 3.97" TFT display with 480×800 resolution and 5-point capacitive touch, it makes it easy to deploy graphic interfaces for dashboards, handheld devices, and interactive projects.

Beyond the display, the shield includes a digital microphone, 6-axis IMU (accelerometer and gyroscope), RGB LED, and an Arducam camera connector. It connects via the middle pin headers on the GIGA R1 WiFi, leaving the top side free for additional shields and all 54 remaining GPIO pins accessible.

Key Features

  • 3.97" TFT Display – 480×800 resolution, 16.7 million colours, 0.108 mm pixel size with edge LED backlight
  • 5-Point Capacitive TouchMulti-touch and gesture support for responsive interfaces
  • BMI270 6-Axis IMU – 16-bit accelerometer (±2g/±4g/±8g/±16g) and gyroscope (±125 to ±2000 dps)
  • MP34DT06JTR Digital Microphone – Omnidirectional, 64 dB signal-to-noise ratio, 122.5 dBSPL AOP
  • SMPL34RGB2W3 RGB LED – Common anode with IS31FL3197 driver and integrated charge pump
  • Arducam Camera Connector – 2.54 mm camera connector for vision projects
  • Bottom-Mount Design – Attaches from below, leaving the top of the GIGA R1 WiFi free for additional shields
  • Weight – 140 g

Ideal For

  • Touch-based graphic user interfaces and dashboards
  • Handheld devices and portable instruments
  • Interactive projects with gesture and motion sensing
  • Audio and camera-enabled prototypes
Note: The GIGA Display Shield requires an Arduino GIGA R1 WiFi board to function. It has no microcontroller and cannot be programmed independently.

Package Contents

  • 1× Arduino GIGA Display Shield

Resources

Jargon buster

Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.

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.
Gyroscope
A gyroscope measures rotation, such as how fast a board is turning around its X, Y, and Z axes. This matters for projects like gesture controls, balancing robots, and motion tracking where tilt or rotation changes need to be detected.
Headers
Rows of metal pins used to plug a module into a breadboard or connect it with jumper wires. Pre-soldered headers make the module easier to use straight away without needing to solder the pins yourself.
IMU
An Inertial Measurement Unit combines motion sensors to measure movement and orientation. It matters for asset tracking because it can detect movement, tilt, vibration, or changes in direction.
LED
A light-emitting diode is a small electronic component that lights up when current flows through it in the correct direction. In this kit, LEDs create the flashing effect, so polarity and correct soldering matter for the project to work.
microcontroller
A microcontroller is a small computer on a chip that runs your program and controls connected inputs and outputs. For this product, it is the part that reads buttons and sensors, drives the display and speaker, and communicates over Bluetooth.
Multi-touch
Multi-touch means the touchscreen can detect more than one finger contact at the same time. This matters for interfaces that use gestures such as pinch-to-zoom, two-finger scrolling, or on-screen controls used together.
RGB
Short for red, green and blue, usually referring to an LED that can mix those three colours. It matters because controlling an RGB LED teaches how separate outputs combine to create different colours.
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.
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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