volumio lcd display brands

One of the most awaited plugins for Volumio is finall here: the touchscreen plugin. With it you can easily show the gorgeous Volumio UI on any display, included the official Raspberry PI Display, available on our Shop. Let’s see how to easily achieve a fantastic touchscreen for your favourite music player in less than 10 minutes. This tutorial will explain how to connect the Raspberry PI display and enable the Volumio UI with the plugin.

Assuming you’ve already downloaded and flashed Volumio to your Raspberry PI (we suggest to use the newest  Raspberry PI 3), the first step is the wiring:First, let’s attach the ribbon cable going from the Raspberry PI Display to the PI itself. On the Raspberry PI Side, make sure the blue part of the ribbon cable is facing outwards. Your final goal should look like this:

Notoriously, feeding your PI with an adequate Power Supply is mandatory to have a reliable system. That’s especially true when we connect a power-hungry device like the Raspberry PI Display. Luckily, there’s a way to understand if your PSU is good enough: just power on your pi and observe the screen, if you see a coloured square on the top-right side of the screen, it means that power to your PI is not enough. Don’t you see it? Then all is good.

That’s the easy one. Just connect to Volumio’s WebUi as you would usually do, and navigate to the Plugins page from the settings menu. In Miscellanea category, you’ll find the Touchscreen plugin. Just click install, nothing more. PLEASE NOTE: The touchscreen plugin is compatible with volumio version from 2.001 onwards

The installation will last about 7 minutes, so wait patiently until you see “Installation Complete”. Now you can enable or disable the Display output to your likings.

I must admit that altough this display is not particularly brilliant when it comes to resolution and colour accuracy, it looks indeed very nice with Volumio’s UI. Also, usability is very good on the Raspberry PI 3 and the UI runs smoothly also with big libraries… So, folks, enjoy!

If you don’t have a Raspberry PI, or you’re simply looking for alternatives to the Official Raspberry PI Display, there are at least two extra options for you:

The Odroid display is not only a viable alternative, it also have several advantages over its PI counterpart:Since it takes power from USB and video signal from HDMI, it can be used virtually with any Computer with an HDMI output, not just the Odroid or the Raspberry PI.

UPDATE: Lot of time since I published the original article. The Odroid 7” does not seem to work properly with Raspberry PI (not tested with the Odroid). So, if you’re looking for a display for the Raspberry PI, get the official one.

The Waveshare 7” display has become rapidly a widely adopted display, thanks to its cheap price. However this particular touchscreen has shown several reliability issues (altough this seems fixed in latest models, thanks to a firmware update), it requires a particular touchscreen driver which is not always included in major distros and its colour reproduction is not the best.

Here we are folks! Hope you found this article helpful, you can share via comment below how you use your Volumio’s touchscreen setup and if there are other display alternatives!

volumio lcd display brands

Volumio 3.3 is also compatible with almost all playback devices, such as Chromecast or SONOS devices, giving the opportunity to listen to content anywhere, and this is undoubtedly of interest even to the most dedicated audiophiles.

volumio lcd display brands

For smaller projects, LCD and ePaper displays are a fun way to add a visual element to your projects. With simple code and wiring, they’re great for projects that require text, menus and navigation.

volumio lcd display brands

After many days of trying different guides I have finally managed to configure Raspberry Pi 3 B+ with 3.5’’ LCD that I bought from AliExpress. This will be step by step guide. If I did it you will too. I am absolute novice at the Linux world.

When you’re done with this go to Settings, where you select Plugins. On the left side click on the Miscellanea tab and install Touch Display Plugin. This can take up to 10 minutes.

I hope this guide will save you some time. For me it worked. I used Volumio version 2.657 but just today as I write this guide version 2.668 was released. I have no idea if it works with that one.

volumio lcd display brands

In order to create a small computer of your own, all you need to have is a raspberry pi board, a display unit and a keyboard (optional). If you are able to find the perfect touch screen, you can create a great DIY computer of your own.

Today, we are going to list down all of the best Raspberry Pi compatible LCD screens available online. These screens are ranked and rated based on the following factors.

Rule of thumb, larger the better. The best of the LCD screens for a Raspberry Pi we got here have a 1080P high resolution and is a full touch screen. There are higher variants available as well but we believe that this is a standard benchmark.

First on our list is an LCD touch screen straight from the official house of Raspberry Pi. It is a 7 inches large touch display that is specifically created for the Raspberry Pi board.

Yet another Kuman 7 inches HD Display Screen, this one is quite different from the previous Kuman display screen. That difference is not just in the screen resolution but in a wide range of other things as well.

Next on our list is 1 large 10.1 inches LED Display. The Elecrow HDMI supported LED display monitor supports all the old and new Raspberry Pi models like the Pi 4, 3, 2, and B, B+ models as well.

Apart from Raspberry Pi models, it is also compatible with PS3, PS4, WiiU and XBOX360 and can also be used for video, for car headrest and as a small display for medical equipment too

In this entry, SunFounder comes with a 10.1 inches large HDMI supported IPS LCD display monitor. It has a high resolution of 1280 X 800 pixels and also comes with a camera holder stand.

Next on our list is another SunFounder Raspberry Pi Compatible screen. This one is a simple 7 inches large LCD Display screen with built-in speakers too.

Next product on our list is from a brand called ELECROW. Their LCD screen comes with 5-inches size display and high-resolution picture. It is a resistive touchscreen monitor and comes with a touch pen for easy use.

This LCD touch screen is from SunFounder which has similar dimensions and aesthetical aspect as the previous 10.1 inches Screen by SunFounder and are essentially the same. This is just an older model of the same product.

Given below are some of the factors that most of the people ask for while purchasing the Raspberry Pi display kits. Get to know about them in detail to make a good choice.

The very first one in the buying guide list is the Price. The price of the displays tends to be more expensive because it comes with the number of features like resolution, size and many more.

But the problem arises when you are unable to afford the money or willing to use the item to fulfill your basic needs. For them, we provided the raspberry pi display kits that come with amazing features at very low prices. Read the product information to know which product best suits your requirements.

Brightness refers to the quality or state of reflecting a light. In other words, brightness can be expressed as the perception elicited by laminating a visual target. It can also be expressed by considering power over a specific area on the monitor. Most of the displays have 200cd/sq.m which is sufficient for a normal usage.

Contrast Ratiodefines the ratio of luminance of the brightest to the darkest color. Generally, the displays are capable of producing high contrast ratio as per the desired. You should also know that there are no specific standards to measure the contrast ratio.

Display resolution or the modes is the number of distinct pixels in each dimension that can be displayed. It is controlled by many of the factors like CRT, flat-panel displays, and LCDs. If the resolution you opt is not compatible then the monitors will stretch and shrink to fit in the specified. It turns result in a great loss of the signal and quality.

Like regular displays, the raspberry pi displays make effective communication between the peripheral devices. For this, it makes use of the connectors. The most common connectors are HDMI, VGA & AV-input. Each of them is illustrated below.

A VGA is a 3-row connector that is provided on many of the display devices like computers, TVs, laptops, and projectors. It is a good quality cable that supports the signal within the bandwidth range of (2-MHz-500MHz).

In this section, we are going to show you exactly how you can connect your Raspberry Pi to an external display screen. First, let us look at how to connect it using an HDMI port

Using the HDMI port to connect a Raspberry Pi to the LCD screen is one of the simplest and easiest ways to go. Here, all you need to do is to take an HDMI cable and plug it on both sides of the devices. One end goes into the HDMI port of the LCD screen and the other one will go right into the Raspberry Pi’s HDMI port. This set up does not require any special drivers software nor does it require any format of post plugin set up.

Raspberry Pi comes with a tiny 15 pin ribbon cable connector that can support a Display Serial Interface or a DSI standard. This enables fast communication between an LCD screen and the chip.

You can use the Raspberry Pi 7 inch touchscreen display by connecting it with the Raspberry Pi board. All you need to do is to first attach the raspberry pi to the back of the display screen using standoffs and screws that come with the kit.

Now connect the Pi board to the ribbon cable and the display control board. Note the ribbon cable pin orientation is proper or not. After this, carefully release the tabs on both sides of the socket so that the cable slides all way. Now secure this by pressing down on the tabs till you hear a click of a lock. Make sure you are not forcing the cable to lock.

If the screen does not automatically turn on when the power source is connected, you may have to connect an existing HDMI display for updating your Raspberry Pi board and then reboot the device.

The Raspberry Pi 7″ Touch Screen Display from the house of Raspberry has a great colour output of 800 x 400 pixels and its capacitive touch is multi-fingered up to 10 fingers. That and the fact that it is specifically built for Raspberry pi Boards by the Raspberry company makes it the best Raspberry Pi LCD screen for your DIY Raspberry pi kit.

volumio lcd display brands

The resolution of the LCD display is 800 x 480, you can configure the resolution via software, and the maximum resolution it supports is 1920 x 1080. It is a USB capacitive touch screen and does not require a driver. It supports five touch control, besides that, the LCD screen comes with an OSD menu adjustment function. You can adjust the contrast, brightness, and switch button. There are 9 interfaces on the back of the screen, one earphone for audio output; two touches (USB connector), for power supply and touch output; one display, an HDMI interface, for connecting the motherboard and LCD display. One power, it can control the backlight to turn on and turn off to save power. One return, it’s only useful in the OSD menu. One right/down, backlight shortcut key. One left/up, backlight shortcut key. A menu, it’s useful in the OSD setting menu, open the OSD/ select key.

volumio lcd display brands

I installed NoMachine on the computer, and then the NoMachine client on an old, low powered 10" tablet that is easy to carry around. This allows me to take control of the GUI on the main computer and operate it just like I am standing there in front of it. The main computer is connected to a TV, so the display is running at a huge 4K and this makes for very tiny text, etc. on the tablet. But this is no problem for NoMachine. It"s quite astonishing. I can zoom and pan if I find it difficult to click on a link, etc. and there is a pop-up keyboard for entering text.

volumio lcd display brands

5) Insert the TF card into the Raspberry Pi, power on the Raspberry Pi, and wait for more than 10 seconds to display normally. But the touch is abnormal at that time, and the touch needs to be calibrated as the following steps.

You can perform touch calibration by clicking the Raspberry Pi icon on the taskbar, selecting Preferences -> Calibrate Touchscreen, and following the displayed prompts.

4. After calibration, the following data will be displayed. If you want to save these touch values, you can replace the data in the red circle with the data in the corresponding position in 99-calibration.conf.

volumio lcd display brands

I’ve installed Volumio in my Raspberry Pi 2 Model B with a non-branded 3.5 inch GPIO display (XPT2046) . After first boot, initial config and Touch Display installed and enabled, I’ve followed the steps here and alternatively here. In that process apparently there’s no errors but when I reboot and Volumio starts the display keeps in black (white initially and black when it starts).

Error modifying /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/95-touch_display-plugin.conf: Error: Command failed: /bin/echo volumio | /usr/bin/sudo -S /bin/sed -i -e ‘/Option “TransformationMatrix”/d’ /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/95-touch_display-plugin.conf [sudo] password for volumio: /bin/sed: can’t read /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/95-touch_display-plugin.conf: No such file or directory

I’ve tried the same process with various Volumio versions (latest, lower than 1.55,…) and the same weird final. In some of the attempts, I connect the RPI to an external monitor via HDMI and I can see the Volumio interface (even with the tactile feedback when I touch the GPIO screen).

volumio lcd display brands

Unfortunately, their “driver” is an SD card image containing a complete installation of Raspbian which has been preconfigured to use their display. Which is fine if you’re setting up a brand new system that doesn’t need to be a specific distro, but if you’re trying to add the display to an existing Raspberry Pi, already configured the way you want it, with software installed and data present, or if you want to use a specific distro such as Octopi, then it’s not terribly helpful.

Hello..I tired to interface this lcd “https://www.crazypi.com/raspberry-pi-products/Raspberry-Pi-Accessories/32-TOUCH-DISPLAY-RASPBERRY-PI” to my Raspberry pi model B+.I got a DVD containing image for LCD in the package.I burned it to the SD card and plugged in the display.But my lcd is completly blank.But green inidcation led (ACT LED) in board is blinking.Why my LCD is Blank ?

My Touchscreen is now working fine.The problem was for the ribbon cable on the back side of LCD.It was not connected properly.I just tighted the cable and it worked fine.Hope it will be useful tip.

Just got my Pi2 running Wheezy, working with the Eleduino 3.5 LCD without running the OEMs image… kinda. I didn’t want to rebuild the application environment again, so was avoiding flashing the SD.

thank you for your great tutorial, it got me on the right way. unfortunataly i only see some boot messages on the lcd and then it turns black. maybe you could give me a hint on how to get it working entirely.

i have a watterott display (https://github.com/watterott/RPi-Display) and changed the device-name to “rpi-display”. i use a rsapberrypi 2 and hae the latest raspian image installed.

I too have a raspberry pi 2, and a waveshare spotpear 3.2 RPi lcd (v3) and I just can’t get it to work! I suspect I have a faulty LCD, but thought I’ll try this forum for help before I sent it back.

Soon as the pi is powered, the LCD lights up all white, with a few vertical pixels coloured at one of the edges, and nothing else. I don’t think that should happen – not at least before the BOIS has started up.

It seems all appears to be working – just the LCD is still all white with a single line of coloured pixels on edge) and nothing else. Is there a way to output, like jeff G script, of touch points?

I had the same one, I finally found a driver for it here: http://www.waveshare.net/wiki/3.2inch_RPi_LCD_(B) you will need to translate the page, but unpack the driver then run sudo ./LCD-show/LCD32-show. It should reboot and all will be good with the screen :)

My system: Raspberry Pi 2 Model B with Raspian Wheezy from Febuary 2015. LCD display of Sainsmart 3.2 http://www.conrad.de/ce/de/product/1283498/Raspberry-Pi-Display-Modul-Touch-Display-81-cm-32/?ref=home&rt=home&rb=1

The LCD display shows the raspberry correctly. However, the touch screen input does not work. The mouse pointer can I move correctly with your finger, but I can not select things (function of the left mouse button).

Do not follow this article when you don’t know what kind of LCD module. In my case, I follow all of this and my raspberry pi cannot boot anymore. I will try to recover, but I think I should format my SD card and reinstall OS.

Expecting this would builtin driver module within kernel and help with avoiding mistakenly overwriting anything. But with this is cause LCD screen to go blank white and no boot activity. Also noticed on HDMI it get stuck on Initial rainbow screen and stuck on that.

Does anyone tried splash boot screen with waveshare v4 LCD and Rpi2? I tried to follow some example from https://github.com/notro/fbtft/wiki/Bootsplash but no success.

Great tutorial thanks; got an X session working great 1st time. Has anybody managed to get Kodi/XMBC working on the LCD either Kodi standalone, Raspbmc or Xbian?

I have exactly the same problem. I also installed a new version of Raspbian, and the LCD part works fine (except all the windows are way too large), but the touch part doesn’t work at all… I’m using Waveshare Spotpear 3.2″ V4.

I remember that I plugged in the screen wrongly one time, before configuring any of the GPIO pins. Can this have damaged the screen? Still it’s weird that the display part works well and the touch part not at all.

I am trying to use the sainsmart 2.8″ lcd sold through microcenter, using the sainsmart32_spi … seems to have the same pinouts, should I be able to get this to work? I am stuck at the white out screen on the lcd, doesn’t seem to recognize the module either.

Unfortunately I’ve tried that ( a few times actually) but the file still doesn’t exist. Thanks very much for the assistance anyway. I must be doing something wrong. My Raspian came from a Noobs installation, I’m wondering if I should try installing the OS from somewhere else. My LCD screen didn’t come with a CD or any docs so I’m completely in the dark here.

Well figured out that step 1 was causing my problems. I’m guessing it is shutting off my hdmi feed and trying to switch it over to the SPI, am I guessing right? If so, not sure how I’m suppose to complete the rest of the steps if my hdmi output gets turned off before the LCD is actually set up to work…that sounds kind of smartass-like, which is not my intention, just looking for some clarification on what is going on in that first step as I am fairly new to this stuff. Thanks.

Anyway, I was able to do the rest of the steps with no problem. LCD didn’t work, but I am using a Waveshare 3.5, which doesn’t look to be supported yet. Mostly I am trying to play around and see if I can get it working somehow. Anyone found a way to do this yet?

Here is a link to an updated image from waveshare. Upon install it got the display up and running, but I still do not have touch functionality. I’ve been playing around with it, but it has been to no avail…hopefully someone better at this stuff from me can get the touch working.

I am having an issue with getting the GUI back. Every time I use startx my pi just sits there for about two minutes saying “No protocol specified”, and then it just gives up. I went through this tutorial about four times now and am not certain why it is doing this. I have the exact same LCD as is in the tutotial (WaveShare 3.2b). any help would be great.

Thanks for the tutorial. It works, but I get the boot/command line stuff on the HDMI monitor and the LCD only comes on when I do startx. Is there a way to get everything to appear on the LCD screen?

Now the OS freezes at the emulation station loading screen, and if I connect my lcd it gives me a lot of error messages which I can only see on the 3.2 inch screen.

This was an excellent tutorial. I have gotten an output to the screen, but no touchscreen usage . I have the Waveshare SpotPear 3.2 Inch LCD V4 screen, but using Raspberry PI 2 with wheezy. Any ideas?

I actually used the driver from here http://www.waveshare.com/wiki/3.2inch_RPi_LCD_(B) , from a new wheezy build, did nothing except enable SPI in config, install driver, and change mmcblk0p2 to mmcblk0p6 in cmdline.txt and it all worked, no drama.

i have raspberry pi 2 with 3.2 inch rpi lcd v4 waveshare spotpear.i have done as per your instructions.the display is working but touch screen not working.error shows waveshare32b module not found as well as touch screen module not found messages.

Unfortunately I have lost the Touch facility on my Waveshare 3.5″ LCD Touchscreen? Can you offer any reasons as to why? I copied the Raspbian image to my Raspberry Pi from the Waveshare website first of all. The Touchscreen displays but is not reactive with any touch

I have purchased a raspberry pi B+ total kit and waveshare 3.2 TFT display online. In the package i have been given a pre-loaded NOOBS installed SD card. I did not even start anything yet. What should i do what r the things needed and how to connect the display i really want to know. I need help as i don’t know anything. Does the above solution help or will u suggest something………………..

Hi great article thanks. I am trying to get a waveshare 7 inch LCD with capacitive touch running it works with the suppled image but if you upgrade it breaks the capacitive touch. I have a sense-hat and GPS which require the latest kernel and RASPIAN image and the install program for the screen replaces the /lib/modules directory and the kernel with older ones. I need to be able to install the touch drivers into a new clean OS can anyone give me some pointers? Thanks

So I have the original image that came with my screen and it works fine with the LCD but my problem is that I want to use my LCD screen with other distros (at this time I am trying to use it with Kali Linux with TFT support by default https://www.offensive-security.com/kali-linux-vmware-arm-image-download/) What do I have to do to transfer the needed files from the original image that WORKS with the screen and use them with another image?

I originally bought this bundle http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B013E0IJUK?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o02_s00 with an RPi LCD V3 and no extra documentation on the specifics on the chipset. I tried with the bftft drivers but since I have no idea what to call this screen I just suppose it isn’t supported.

I am using the same LCD and followed your tutorial. Have your tested the guide lately? Are you certain that it works? I see the boot messages on console but I get white screen as GUI starts.

I have tried to set up waveshare 32b on my Pi B using the latest Raspian download. I learned a lot in the process using Windows Putty, Nano etc. I have repeated the setup process several times from scratch and included the corrections for possible overwriting. My Waveshare SpotPear 3.2 inch RPi LCD V4 just shows a white screen. Any suggestions?

Hi, I am using raspberry pi 2 with raspbian jessie installed. I the waveshare spotpear 3.2 v4. The above instructions are not working. and after completing the steps there was no display from hdmi or lcd. One things to notify is.: the etc/modules files only had i2c-dev and not snd-bcm2835.

I am trying to get this to work with Retro Pie 3.3.1 and the Waveshare3.2″ v4 but I only get the terminal on the lcd and emulation station starts on hdmi. to get it working with retro pie i just replaced startx with emulationstation. how do i get this to work?

Sir, Your post has very useful to me. i am using Tinylcd. but i cant get display. i am performing all the steps in your post. i cant get touch controller information from the product website and also i am using RASPberryPi B+ model. could u please give me best solution to my work. Than you.

i installed android OS in raspberry pi 2. can i use same LCD touch screen set up for android installed raspberry pi 2 which you are used for raspbian.

Is it normal the white back light during the whole process of initializing (I suspect that during the transportation trere is a deffect)? The problem is that I missed the step #1 and I performed it at the end. Unfortunately I don’t have any monitor available right now – neither “normal”, neither LCD :))))). Is it possible turning back the system or the only option is reinstallation of the Raspbian?

I’m trying to use an original Raspberry Pi model B with a cheap 3.5 inch 320×480 LCD which allegedly was manufactured to work with the Pi and has the correct fittings to fit over the GPIO pins. The operating system is the latest, downloaded yesterday and installed with NOOBS. I can’t get past step 2 of this guidance. When I reboot after using raspi-config I can see text generated as the Pi boots, then the HDMI fed screen goes blank apart from a flashing cursor in the top left hand corner. The LCD just remains white with nothing else on it. I have missed out step 1 and rebooted after step 2 and the screen functions as I would expect. Does anyone have any ideas please?

Thanks for the great tutorial. I do have a question. Once you install the drivers for the lcd are you effectively disabiling the hdmi port or is it still available to use and will the pi function with both displays. I have a pi 3

once you install the drivers it replaces the kernel by disabling hdmi output and enables it for LCD. i don’t think we have a solution to get em both working at the same time. ( you are encouraged to search for it )

i am sorry, but i am a naive , and i have this question, can we upload any file into it for the display? like have a software in which if i tap it gives back a feedback to the code?

I’d like to find the driver software for my 7″ LCD with touch (official Pi unit) so that I can use it in buildroot. I wanted to make sure this kernel is the one before I started digging further.

I started through your tutorial and completed step 3 and rebooted. After the Raspberry screen and some of the boot text on my HDMI monitor, I now have a black HDMI monitor and a white screen on my LCD. Does this mean that the bootloader was overwritten or something else is wrong? How am I supposed to enter in the proposed fixes to the bootloader, when I can’t get the RPi to boot? Do I have to interrupt the boot process at some point to reinstall the bootloader or what?

Its a script. Download and instead of running sudo ./LCD4-show run cat ./LCD4-show to simply display what it does without actually running it. The commands are fairly simple modifying a few files. I actually saved the LCD-show.tar.gz on my own server for faster future download but also for backup as it saved me tons of hours (if that’s a measuring unit for time :) )

I used this link though (smaller file ~ 50 KB, fast download) http://www.waveshare.com/w/upload/4/4b/LCD-show-161112.tar.gz and replaced LCD4-show with LCD32-show in the last line.

i bought a 3.5 inch tft lcd screen from banggood. and i have installed raspian jessie, the latest version, in my sd card. but when i power on my Pi, only a white backlit screen comes. there are no images or graphics whatsoever.

PLEASE DELETE this article. You have great power with this article showing up for so many people in their search results, and you display ZERO responsibility. This is terrible!

Will your system work with my SainSmart 2.8″ 2.8 inch TFT LCD 240×320 Arduino DUE MEGA2560 R3 Raspberry Pi ? I would like to know before not be able to back out. Thanks, Lee

I ‘m actually using a LCD Waveshare3.2” , I followed your steps to setup the lcd touchscreen for my rpi and it work but I have a problem with the resolution because if I open a repertory I do not see the whole contents on the screen .

it worked. but the resolution is for bigger screens. i got the menubar small, but the rest appears too big , and out of screen. the wastebasket icon is 1/6 of my 3.2″ screen. wich HAS the resolution capability too display the whole desktop. But i’m a PI newby and dunno how to adjust the screen resolution on this display. anybody?

I did a 5inch LCD for my raspberry pi. I dont use the touchscreen so i didnt have to install any drivers. It works out of the box but doesnt cover the whole screen unless you open the terminal and do:

In the case of the WaveShare driver, their setup script from their “LCD_show” repository will copy a device-tree overlay to /boot/overlays/ that provides most of the module config etc via boot-time device-tree patch.

volumio lcd display brands

If the Hifiberry has a breakout on top, you should be able to put the LCD on that and use it without problems. As per the Adafruit page, that board only uses the I2C bus (plus power, presumably), and this can support multiple devices as long as they use different addresses (you can check that with i2cdetect).

Otherwise, you will have to somehow attach the I2C and power pins to the LCD (I would guess the LCD is 5V, and probably doesn"t also require 3.3V) without blocking the pins in order to attach the Hifiberry. Or you could do it the other way around if you can find out what pins the Hifiberry needs, although I suspect this will be more awkward because it probably needs more than just two. Also, if you separate the LCD, you could mount it on top/though a case, leaving the Hifiberry attached to the Pi inside.