{"title":"Pirate Audio: 3W Stereo Amp for Raspberry Pi","handle":"pirate-audio-3w-stereo-amp-for-raspberry-pi","url":"/products/pirate-audio-3w-stereo-amp-for-raspberry-pi","description":"Bring an old radio or set of&nbsp;speakers into the 21st century with Pirate Audio 3W Stereo Amp for Raspberry Pi! Get&nbsp;punchy&nbsp;digital audio through the push-fit terminals and control your music with the&nbsp;built-in colour LCD and playback control buttons.The push-fit connectors on Pirate Audio 3W Stereo Amp make it&nbsp;super-simple to connect up a set of speakers, whether they're bookshelf or floor-standing speakers, or the speakers in an old radio.&nbsp;Play crisp digital audio from local files (MP3, FLAC, etc.) or stream from&nbsp;services like Spotify. The combined DAC and amp gives you crisp 24-bit / 192KHz digital audio through your connected stereo speakers (or mixed-down mono through a single channel).Pirate Audio is a range of all-in-one&nbsp;audio boards for Raspberry Pi, with high-quality digital audio, beautifully-crisp IPS displays for album art, tactile buttons for playback control, and our custom Pirate Audio software&nbsp;and installer to make setting it all up&nbsp;a breeze.Features\nMAX98357A DAC / amplifier chip x2 (datasheet)\nStereo 3W (per channel) audio out\nPush-fit speaker terminals\nSwitch for stereo / mixed-down mono modes\n1.3\" IPS colour LCD (240x240px) (ST7789 driver)\nFour tactile buttons\nMini HAT-format board\nFully-assembled\nCompatible with all 40-pin header Raspberry Pi models\nPirate Audio software\nDimensions: 65x30.5x9.5mm\nSoftwareOur&nbsp;Pirate Audio software and installer&nbsp;installs the Python library&nbsp;for the LCD, configures the I2S audio and SPI, and then installs Mopidy and our custom Pirate Audio plugins to display album art and track info, and to use the buttons for playback control.Here's how to get started:\nSet an SD card up with the latest version of Raspbian.\nConnect to Wi-Fi or a wired network.\nOpen a terminal and type the following:git clone https://github.com/pimoroni/pirate-audiocd pirate-audio/mopidysudo ./install.sh\n\nReboot your Pi\nYou can find more detailed instructions here:&nbsp;https://github.com/pimoroni/pirate-audio/tree/master/mopidy&nbsp;or get tonnes more info&nbsp;in our&nbsp;Getting Started with Pirate Audio&nbsp;tutorial.NotesNote that our installer, linked above, does all of the below for you, but if you're an intrepid hacker then you might need to know this stuff!\nThe push-fit connectors require you to push gently on the tab to&nbsp;allow the cable to be inserted / removed. Do this carefully, to avoid breaking the clip!\nThe DAC can be configured by adding&nbsp;dtoverlay=hifiberry-dac&nbsp;to the&nbsp;/boot/config.txt&nbsp;file.\nThere is a DAC&nbsp;enable pin—BCM 25— that must be driven high to enable the DAC. You can do this by adding&nbsp;gpio=25=op,dh&nbsp;to the&nbsp;/boot/config.txt&nbsp;file.\nThe buttons are active low, and connected to pins&nbsp;BCM 5, 6, 16, and 20\nThe display uses SPI, and you'll need to enable SPI through the Raspberry Pi configuration menu.\nIf you want to use these boards with a Pibow Coupé case (either for the Zero / Zero W or Pi&nbsp;4), then you'll need to use a&nbsp;booster header&nbsp;to raise it up a little.\n","vendor":"Little Bird","product_type":"physical","in_stock":false,"options":[],"variants":[{"id":4485,"title":"Default Title","sku":"PR-PIM484","price":44.81,"on_sale":false,"in_stock":false,"available_quantity":0,"option1":"Default Title"}]}