N2+ Cube Case
N2+ Cube Case
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Description ▼
The N2 Cube Case can embed an ODROID-N2+. There are four USB ports on the front panel allowing you to easily connect game controllers or input/output devices.
Passionate “old-school” game players from the early 2000’s will be smiling with nostalgia at our homage to a legendary game console released in 2001.
There is a power button with a red LED and a function button with a green LED which is configurable. The power button signal need to be connected to a GPIO input on the 40-pin IO header of the N2+ board through a female-to-female jumper cable.
The green LED can be controlled by a GPIO pin, and the user configurable Function button status can be read by a GPIO pin through the IO header, so they can be accessed with a simple Python script on Linux.
Its shape is close to a cube with size of 150x157x110mm. A big handle on the rear side helps you carry the N2 Cube Case around.
Components in the box
- Case Top
- Case Bottom
- Front panel
- USB hub board
- Rear panel
- Base board
- M3 – 10 nickel screw x 4
- M3 – 6 nickel screw x 2
- Screw for plastic parts x 9
- 15mm PCB support plastic M3 x 2
- Rubber feet x 4
- Screwdriver x 1
- USB 2.0 Type-C cable
How to assemble
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SKU:I0739
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Trivia Time!
I originally purchased several N2+ devices for low-power, onsite servers, but this was my first attempt at using the device for anything else. The case assembles well, and everything fits. My only negative is the lack of female connector cables for the front switches and leds. It also took me a while to work out how I wanted to configure them and which pins to connect them to. This is probably very familiar to many in the community, but since everything else about this case feels ready-to-run, including the necessary jumper wires and content on the wiki would have made this the perfect "first-timers" project.




