T
he Pi Hut’s custom-designed
Raspberry Pi 4 case comes in
sheet form, laser-cut from a
mixture of coloured and transparent
acrylic. Assembly is relatively
straightforward, though the plastic
mounting pillars and screws provided
can’t withstand repeated assembly and
disassembly, and there are no thermal
interface pads required.
Instead, cooling is provided by a single 5 V
cooling fan installed beneath vents in the
transparent lid. By default, this is set to suck air
out of the case and away; flipping it around to
blow offers a
minor improvement
in cooling performance at
the cost of a dramatic increase in noise.
There’s no software or speed control for
the fan, and it ties up the 5 V and GND pins on
the GPIO header – which is inaccessible once
assembled. The CSI and DSI headers are likewise
locked away, though cables for these can at least
be routed between the walls and the case lid.
The acrylic lid effectively insulates Raspberry
Pi 4, leaving the fan vent as the only place for
heat to escape.
Despite its fan, The Pi Hut case’s cooling
performance is the second-worst on test – behind
only the Raspberry Pi 4 Stand.
A wholly acrylic creation, The Pi Hut’s case relies on
a small always-on fan to keep Raspberry Pi 4 cool
The Pi Hut magpi.cc/pihutpi4case £10 / $11
The Pi Hut
Raspberry Pi 4 Case 2.0
There’s no software or speed
control for the fan, and it
ties up the 5 V and GND pins
on the GPIO header
DIMENSIONS:
97.7×69.7×36.3 mm
MATERIAL:
Acrylic
WEIGHT (INC. ONE
RASPBERRY PI 4):
125 g
NUMBER
OF BOARDS
SUPPORTED:
1
COOLING
METHOD:
Fan
SPECS
Verdict
The Pi Hut case
is a cheap option.
Despite including
active cooling, it
fails to outperform
any of the passive
options on test
- bar only the in
effect uncooled
Raspberry
Pi 4 Stand.
4 /10
CPU Temperature CPU Clock CPU Clock (Moving Average)
Frequency
(MHz)
850
1100
1350
1600
Temperature
(Degrees Celsius)
45
55
65
75
85
Time (Seconds)
200 400 600 800
Thermal imaging Thermal load
72 magpi.cc Raspberry Pi thermal case group test
REVIEW