Sam Hocevar's Project-piCo Hits a New Milestone, Releasing a KiCad Clone of the Raspberry Pi Pico W

Permissively-licensed copy swaps micro-USB to USB Type-C, while a variant with PCB antenna is being held back pending patent expiration.

ghalfacree
about 2 months ago HW101

Maker Sam Hocevar has released a KiCad project that clones the Raspberry Pi Pico W, with one major difference: the outdated micro-USB connector has been swapped out for a USB Type-C port instead.

"This is a continuation of my USB-C [Raspberry Pi] Pico project that previously only had the regular Pico available," Hocevar explains. "I had been wanting to work on some projects with the Pico W, and I went ahead and remade this board in KiCad as well so that its design could be more widely accessible."

Project-piCo bears new fruit, with the release of a KiCad clone of the Raspberry Pi Pico W. (📷: Sam Hocevar)

While Raspberry Pi makes board design files for the Raspberry Pi Pico range available to download, they're provided in the proprietary Cadence Allegro file format — requiring either payment of a hefty license fee or multiple stages of error-prone conversion to make them accessible to hobbyists. Hocevar's clone, by contrast, was reverse-engineered from the original boards and is provided in KiCad format.

The latest release marks a new milestone for Project-piCo, which Hocevar launched earlier this year with a clone of the original Raspberry Pi Pico — that, unlike the newer Raspberry Pi Pico W, does not include an on-board Wi-Fi or Bluetooth radio module. Like Hocevar's original release, the clone should be functionally identical to the original bar the move from a micro-USB connector to the more modern USB Type-C — and the loss of castellated pin headers, preventing easy installation as a surface-mount module.

Hocevar has designed two versions of the board, but is holding back on releasing a PCB antenna variant (pictured) due to a patent on the technology. (📷: Sam Hocevar)

Interestingly, Hocevar has designed two versions of his Raspberry Pi Pico W clone but has released only one. "I have one board that looks more like the factory Pico WH in that the antenna is built-in to the PCB," he explains, "and another board that uses a soldered on metal antenna. The reason for this is due to a patent on the PCB antenna technology. To my understanding, this patent is set to expire on March 11, 2038, and I do intend on releasing the other board at this time."

More information is available in Hocevar's Reddit post, while the design files have been added to the Project-piCo GitHub repository under the permissive WTFPL public-domain license.

ghalfacree

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

Latest Articles