/*@BUILD:include:src/header.html@*/

PM_K‑1 Kit

Build it yourself: a Raspberry Pi Pico on the 52Pi breadboard kit becomes a touchscreen polymeter metronome — same engine, same program strings, with a precompiled CircuitPython firmware bundle and one‑click updates over USB‑MIDI.

/*@BUILD:include:src/infoembed.html@*/

What it is

Buildable nowRaspberry Pi Pico52Pi EP‑0172 kit~$45 incl. Pico

This is the first member of the family you can actually build today from off‑the‑shelf parts: a Raspberry Pi Pico seated on the 52Pi EP‑0172 "Pico Breadboard Kit Plus", which carries a 3.5″ ST7796 320×480 capacitive‑touch screen (GT911), a PSP joystick, a WS2812 RGB LED, a speaker and two buttons — all pre‑wired, so you don't solder anything; you just seat the Pico and drop the firmware bundle onto its USB drive.

It runs the same polymeter engine and the same program strings as the web editor: design a groove on the site and Save to device over USB‑MIDI (or edit on the device's touchscreen — beats, lanes, playlists), and it plays standalone. Tap the screen, nudge tempo with the joystick; the RGB shows run/stop and the beat pulse, and the speaker clicks. Powered over the Pico's USB.

Wiring — the EP‑0172 fixed pinout (Raspberry Pi Pico)

Everything is wired on the board; this is just what the firmware drives. No breadboarding required.

ComponentRaspberry Pi Pico pins
Display — 3.5″ ST7796, 320×480 (SPI0)
SCK / MOSIGP2 / GP3
CS / DC / RSTGP5 / GP6 / GP7
Touch — GT911 capacitive (I2C0)
SDA / SCL — addr 0x5DGP8 / GP9
Controls & feedback
PSP joystick X / YADC0 (GP26) / ADC1 (GP27)
Button A (play/stop) / Button B (tap)GP15 / GP14
WS2812 RGB LEDGP12
SpeakerGP13
Parts

An off‑the‑shelf kit, not a custom board — ballpark one‑off prices (USD).

PartQty~$
Raspberry Pi Pico (or Pico W / Pico 2) — the brain15
52Pi EP‑0172 "Pico Breadboard Kit Plus" — 3.5″ ST7796 cap‑touch, GT911, PSP joystick, WS2812 RGB, speaker, 2 buttons, breadboard, acrylic panel138
USB cable — power + flashing12
Total (one‑off)≈ $45

Reference: 52Pi EP‑0172 wiki · vendor code. Lots may ship the screen as ST7796 (320×480) — this build targets that.

Firmware — self‑contained appliance (USB drive · on‑device editing · push programming · MIDI audio · practice log)

The firmware turns the Pico into a self‑contained appliance: it mounts as a USB drive carrying the (precompiled) firmware, your tracks and an offline copy of this editor; drives a full lanes/pads touchscreen with on‑device editing (tap beats, tap an instrument for the lane editor, add/remove lanes, save/revert); logs your practice to history.json; takes new set lists pushed from the editor over USB‑MIDI; and plays out your computer's speakers over USB‑MIDI. By default the firmware owns the drive (read‑only to the computer — so it can log and can't be accidentally erased); hold button A at power‑on for editor mode (drive writable).

Download CircuitPython bundle ↓ Source + README ↗

  1. Flash CircuitPython (raspberry_pi_pico) via BOOTSEL, unzip the bundle onto CIRCUITPY, and power‑cycle. It boots into appliance mode.
  2. Program it from the web: build a set list in the editor (Chrome/Edge/Firefox), then the set‑list menu → 📟 Save to device. It's pushed over USB‑MIDI and the device shows Saved ✓. (Fallback for any browser: it downloads programs.json — boot holding A and drag it on.)
  3. Play through your computer: click 🎹 Device audio, then press play on the device — the full groove sounds through your speakers over USB‑MIDI, in sync; the screen shows a MIDI badge and the speaker mutes.
  4. Practice log: plays over 5 s appear at the bottom of the screen (time · BPM · duration · track); tap a row twice to delete.
  5. Firmware updates: ⋯ menu → ⬆ Update firmware — it checks your version, pushes the latest over USB‑MIDI, and the device A/B‑updates with automatic rollback if a build won't boot.

Embed this widget elsewhere with one <div> + a script — see the embed docs.

/*@BUILD:include:src/footer.html@*/