8086 Consultancy's PicoIO64 Brings 64 Fully-Functional GPIO Pins to Any Raspberry Pi Pico, Pico 2

Found your Raspberry Pi Pico floundering due to a lack of GPIO pins? Have a carrier board that delivers 64 5V-tolerant input/output pins.

Nottinghamshire-based 8086 Consultancy has launched a carrier board for the Raspberry Pi Pico, Pico W, Pico 2, or Pico 2 W designed for anyone who has found themselves a pin or two short on a project — the PicoIO64, which adds 64 5V-tolerant general-purpose input/output (GPIO) pins to the board.

"The PicoIO64 adds 64 3.3V I/O pins (5V tolerant) to the Raspberry Pi Pico using four 16-bit [MaxLinear] XRA1403 SPI IO expanders coupled with an 800mA 3.3V regulator," 8086 Consultancy's Chris Burton explains of the company's latest board design. "The I/O can be used for front panel LED, buttons interfaces, etc."

The PicoIO64 delivers an impressive 64 GPIO pins on any model of Raspberry Pi Pico, through a quartet of expander chips. (📷: 8086 Consultancy)

The board's input/output pins are arranged in two banks, each of which have two 16-bit IO expanders with dedicated SPI connections, IRQ, reset, and chip select. "Splitting the banks like this," Burton explains, "allows each bank's SPI interface to be controlled using a dedicated core of the [Raspberry Pi] RP2040/RP2350 at up to 26MHz."

Each of the 64 GPIO pins on the board can be configured as a push-pull output with optional three-state mode, input with optional polarity inversion and optional 100k pull-up resistor, or for what Burton describes as "a multitude of interrupt options" including rising and falling edge triggers and filters. Each pin can source or sink up to 25mA with a total of 100mA per eight-pin bank an a source limit of 160mA total across each extender's 16 pins.

The board is available to order now on the 8086 Consultancy Tindie store for $12.50 as a self-assembly soldering kit or $16 fully assembled; a CircuitPython library for controlling the MaxLinear expanders from the Raspberry Pi Pico is available on GitHub under the permissive MIT license.

ghalfacree

Freelance journalist, technical author, hacker, tinkerer, erstwhile sysadmin. For hire: freelance@halfacree.co.uk.

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