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LicheePi 4A quad-core RISC-V SBC is now available with 16GB RAM and 128GB eMMC flash, and Sipeed has also introduced various accessories such as a metal enclosure, a 10.1-inch touchscreen display, a PoE module, and a camera module.
The Lichee Pi 4A board was first unveiled in December 2022, before the beta version launched in May 2023 with 8GB RAM and 8GB flash. Since then Sipeed also started selling an 8GB/32GB model, and now a new version of the T-Head TH1520-powered single board computer is now available with 16GB LPDDR4X and 128GB eMMC flash for $179 plus shipping.
While pricing is quite different, the LicheePi 4A was launched as a RISC-V alternative to the Raspberry Pi 4 SBC, so here are the specifications of the two boards side-by-side.
Sipeed currently provides a Debian image based on Linux 5.10 and built with Yocto, but Linux mainline support is being worked on. OpenWrt and Android images will also be released by the company, and a few third-party images are also offered by the community. You’ll find all images on the wiki, but note that as with other RISC-V platforms software is still a work in progress.
We’ve already discussed performance in our article about the Sipeed LM4A T-Head TH1520 RISC-V module found in the LicheePi 4A SBC and benchmarks like Dhrystone, Coremark, and GeekBench 5 show a performance very similar to the one of the Raspberry Pi 4, sometimes faster or slower depending on the workload. The 16GB RAM version of the LicheePi 4A brings a feature that’s impossible not available on the Raspberry Pi 4B even though the Broadcom BCM2711 SoC is limited to 8GB supports up to 16GB RAM.
As noted in the introduction, the LicheePi 4A also got a metal enclosure and other accessories. so let’s have a look at some of those.
The first one is a 10.1-inch display with a capacitive touchscreen and 1280×800 resolution, which should connect to the 4-lane MIPI DSI connector on the board via a small adapter board and a flat cable.
Next, there are two 5MP camera modules. The first one is based on an Omnivision OV5693 CMOS sensor and connects to the board through its MIPI CSI 0 connector, but the second is also based on a 5MP sensor, but also comes with a microphone, and exposes a USB Type-C port for connection to the SBC.
Lichee also offers a 37V-57V PoE module with an output of 5V/2.4A to power the board. It needs to be soldered to the board, and based on the photo above, it won’t fit into the metal enclosure. So you have to pick one: case or PoE module.
Other accessories like a 12V/2A power adapter and the RV Debugger Plus UART/JTAG debugging board are older items that were already available previously. The aluminum enclosure sells for $10.80, the display can be purchased for $49.90, the MIPI CSI camera module for $7.90, the USB camera module for $12.50, and the PoE module for $6. You’ll find all these on Aliexpress along with the LicheePi 4A SBC.
Jean-Luc started CNX Software in 2010 as a part-time endeavor, before quitting his job as a software engineering manager, and starting to write daily news, and reviews full time later in 2011.
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Did any one see comparison/benchmarks of this lichee pi4 with vision five 2?
https://github.com/ThomasKaiser/sbc-bench/blob/master/Results.md
Ah this explains things. I received a visionfive2 a few days ago, I had never seen that bad memory timings, even worse than on a 396 MHz MIPS-based glinet: 1 microsecond to read 8 pointers! In fact I think my 8088 used to have better timings 35 years ago. And seeing the horrible memset/memcpy() timings just confims what I saw. Had I known for this one finally arriving, I would have waited a few more weeks to get a better model. That’s not dramatic, I wanted to have a look at RISC-V atomics, at least this board will magnify every… Read more »
A computer without an operating system is useless.
With it shipping with Debian pre-installed, and a fair number of useful packages already available, this is RISC-V entering the consumer market!
I wish Sipeed (and the TH1520 with it’s published C910 cores) a huge amount of success.
A board like this ought to have widespread uses…
I have the 8/8 version and have played with it a bit. Software support is still very limited but it’s constantly evolving. Haven’t seen a 6.x kernel yet but commits for support have been merged into mainline so I anticipate 6.x will be in the near future. I also have a Visionfive2 and this is definitely faster, though software is much more limited at the moment.
The 16GB RAM version of the LicheePi 4A brings a feature that’s impossible on the Raspberry Pi 4B since the Broadcom BCM2711 SoC is limited to 8GB.
Technically, the BCM2711 SoC supports 16GB:
raspberrypi.com/news/8gb-raspberry-pi-4-on-sale-now-at-75/
The BCM2711 chip that we use on Raspberry Pi 4 can address up to 16GB of LPDDR4 SDRAM, so the real barrier to our offering a larger-memory variant was the lack of an 8GB LPDDR4 package. These didn’t exist (at least in a form that we could address) in 2019, but happily our partners at Micron stepped up earlier this year with a suitable part.
Thanks for the comments. I’ve corrected the article.
With documentation for module not moving past “v0.1” itself, it seems it would be better to buy Beagle instead.
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