This is the reduced to the max case / housing / sleeve for the Raspberry Pi Pico, less is hard to imagine. A foldable print in place housing with live hinge that is less than 2mm bigger than the Pico itself. All interfaces are accessible and the board itself is covered and protected. Above that it prints as one piece, the assembly is easy and no tools or screws are needed. Just print (in less than 15 minutes) and use…
The case itself has a wall thickness of 0.8mm, optimized for printing with 0.4mm nozzles. The live hinges are exactly one layer (with a layer height of 0.2 mm) high and all openings can easily be bridged with standard cooling settings. All corners and edges (as far as possible) have rounded with fillets clipped at 35° to avoid any overhangs that would need supports.
All interfaces and also the GPIO pins have openings which are separate parts, all labelled according to the pin out in the 3mf file, in the model. Simply delete the ones you need open…
Since this minimum of a case could be a starting point for your own Raspberry Pi Pico project we also included a STEP and STL file below…
The part prints with standard settings (0.4 mm nozzle, 0.2 mm layer height, 2 perimeters, 5 bottom / 4 top layers) without any issues but in case you want to take it one step further and optimize the result there are two recommendations, one for opaque and one for transparent / translucent filaments:
If you want the airy top and bottom shell you just have to (after splitting into parts) set the top and bottom layers as well as the perimeter count to 0 for the respective parts. We had the best results with an infill of 40% with cubic, gyroid or rectelinear infill since these provide enough stability for the shell and many other available patterns do not make sense here since they disintegrate without perimeters and bottom / top layers.
In any case auto cooling should be enabled since the layer times are very low towards the end. If you still experience issues with curled areas you might want to try to print two parts at the same time, then all parts should have sufficient cooling time between the layers.
Just one last thing: We recommend “initializing” live hinges direct after printing, and on the print bed when taking the parts off. Just fold them when still warm and you will have a much nicer bend at the live hinges…
Not much of an assembly actually, place the Raspberry in the case, fold the top and click in place.
These are affiliate links and I will get a few cents of your purchase but since the models are free it would be kind to still use them!
Happy printing!
The author marked this model as their own original creation.