Maker.io main logo

Assembling Pibow Frame for Raspberry Pi Touch Display 2

2025-06-05 | By Pimoroni

License: See Original Project Displays LCD / TFT Raspberry Pi SBC

Courtesy of Pimoroni

Guide by Pimoroni

Our Pibow Frame will protect the back of your shiny new Raspberry Pi Touch Display 2 and stand it up nicely on your desk in either portrait or landscape orientations. It even lets you mount the Pi any way up! This guide will show you how to assemble it.

What You'll Need

Kit Contents

Here's what you get in the kit:

  • 3x different screen sized acrylic pieces

  • 2x vertical mounting places (the long ones)

  • 2x horizontal mounting plates (the short ones)

  • 2x legs with rubber feet

  • A standoff kit containing 4x 7mm standoffs and 4x M2.5 5mm screws

kit_1

If you're missing anything, drop support a line and we'll get it sorted.

Assembling the screen

First up, unpeel all the protective plastic from both sides of the acrylic parts.

first_2

You'll then need to unpack your screen - it should come with two different ribbon cables, a red and black power cable and some M2.5 screws. Note the screws that come with the screen are slightly shorter than the ones included in our standoff kit.

unpack_3

Lay the screen face down on a flat surface. We'd suggest leaving the protective plastic on the front of the screen whilst you assemble the frame.

screen_4

The two large acrylic pieces with a large hole in are subtly different - one has two tabs at one end of the inner cutout. You'll need the one without the tabs first - slot it over the back of the display like this:

pieces_5

Then add the layer with the tabs - they should slot into the indentations on the back of the display.

layer_6

Open the ribbon connector on the display by sliding the grey tabs sideways slightly. Be gentle, these FFC connectors are quite delicate and it's possible to break the tabs if you try and open it too far.

connector_7

Insert the large end of your ribbon cable into the connector with the metal contacts facing upwards and secure it in place by pushing the grey tabs back into place.

We've got a Pi 5, so we're using the display cable with a smaller end that will fit the Pi 5's smaller DSI connectors. If you're using a version of Pi with a large DSI connector, you'll need to use the ribbon cable that's the same size at both ends.

cable_8

Plug the two-pin end of the red and black power cable into the two-pin connector on the display (it will only go in one way).

plug_9

Thread the ends of the cables through the large hole in the third large acrylic piece and fit it in place over the back of the display.

thread_10

Fitting the legs

Before you fit the legs, you'll need to decide what orientation you want your display to be mounted in. We're going to be mounting our landscape/horizontally, so we're using the two shorter mounting plates:

mount_11

Fit the tabs on the legs into the slots on the mounting plates.

fit_12

Place the mounting plate on the back of the frame. The small holes in the mounting plate should match up with the holes on the frame.

place_13

place_14

To fix the mounting plates in place, use the four screws that come in the standoff set (they're a little bit longer than the ones that come with the screen, so will pass comfortably through the acrylic and into the screen mounting supports).

fix_15

fix_16

Adding the Pi

Next, we're adding the Pi - for this we'll need the screws that come with the display and the M2.5 standoffs.

adding_17

Screw the 4 M2.5 standoffs into the display's built-in standoffs.

Using these standoffs is optional, but we found having a bit of a gap between the display and the Pi made it much easier to plug cables into the Pi, especially in portrait orientations when the legs tend to get in the way.

standoffs_18

standoffs_19

Pop your Pi on top of the display's built-in standoffs and use the M2.5 screws to fix it in place.

pop_20

Plug the power cable into the first three pins on the Raspberry Pi's GPIO header as shown. Make sure the red wire is going to pin 2, which is the first pin on the top row (check Raspberry Pi's helpful diagram if you're unsure!)

Connect the end of the ribbon cable to the display connector on your Raspberry Pi. This connector works in a similar way to the one on the display, but you need to slide the tab towards you rather than sideways to open it.

connect_20

Tada, you're done!

done_21

done_22

Variations!

Mount the Pi the other way up

If you'd prefer to have your USB-C and display ports pointing upwards, you could attach the mounting plates to the frame the other way up:

mount_23

Portrait

If you want to use the display in portrait orientation, you'll need to use the two longer mounting plates, as so:

portrait_24

Or with the Pi the other way up!

up_24

up_25

Don't forget to remove the protective plastic from the display when you're done!

Next steps

You can rotate the display to match your chosen orientation in the Screen Configuration utility (find it under the 'Preferences' menu in Raspberry Pi OS). For info on how to rotate without a desktop, check out Raspberry Pi's documentation!

That's all folks!

PIBOW FRAME FOR RASPBERRY PI TOU
Mfr Part # PIM756
PIBOW FRAME FOR RASPBERRY PI TOU
Pimoroni Ltd
$124.97
View More Details
Mfr Part # SC1635
RASPBERRY PI TOUCH DISPLAY 2
Raspberry Pi
$492.66
View More Details
Mfr Part # SC1113
SBC 2.4GHZ 4 CORE 16GB RAM
Raspberry Pi
$985.32
View More Details
Add all DigiKey Parts to Cart
Have questions or comments? Continue the conversation on TechForum, DigiKey's online community and technical resource.