Hello,
I'm thinking of powering two raspberry pi 5 boards, both with nvme ssd storage and a raspberry pi 4 that has all kinds of peripherals (I get undervolt warnings on it when it's booting up with the official pi4 psu so I'm thinking of moving the pico that's connected to it as a gpio expansion to it's seperate power source).
Anyway, would something like this power the all 3 Pis and the pico (5V 60A) :
https://www.amazon.de/ALITOVE-Switching ... B08SVND5QD
Or this one (5V 70A):
https://www.amazon.de/ALITOVE-Switching ... B096DR2FNN
Also what would the recommended cable thickness for a 2 meter run be for each Pi and whether to use the USB-C port or rather double 5V and ground pins on the GPIO to power the PIs? I read on this forum that powering with high current through GPIO it's recommended to use two pins for 5V and GND. And last but not least, it probably would be smart to put that PSU in a case of some sort right?
Any input on this is appreciated.
I'm thinking of powering two raspberry pi 5 boards, both with nvme ssd storage and a raspberry pi 4 that has all kinds of peripherals (I get undervolt warnings on it when it's booting up with the official pi4 psu so I'm thinking of moving the pico that's connected to it as a gpio expansion to it's seperate power source).
Anyway, would something like this power the all 3 Pis and the pico (5V 60A) :
https://www.amazon.de/ALITOVE-Switching ... B08SVND5QD
Or this one (5V 70A):
https://www.amazon.de/ALITOVE-Switching ... B096DR2FNN
Also what would the recommended cable thickness for a 2 meter run be for each Pi and whether to use the USB-C port or rather double 5V and ground pins on the GPIO to power the PIs? I read on this forum that powering with high current through GPIO it's recommended to use two pins for 5V and GND. And last but not least, it probably would be smart to put that PSU in a case of some sort right?
Any input on this is appreciated.
Statistics: Posted by 7thCore — Fri Jul 05, 2024 7:19 am — Replies 1 — Views 73