![]() ![]() After taking out the four rubber pads and loosening the four screws on the bottom of the enclosure we can access the board.Īfter removing two more screws, we can completely take out the board and see the processor is in contact with the metal case through a thermal pad, as it should be. The latter is quite bigger than the other two. This should allow for some innovative and inexpensive mounting options…īefore I teardown the device, let’s have a little family reunion with from left to right: NanoPi NEO3, NanoPi R2S, and NanoPi R4S. Yes, it is! I could mount the gateway on a camera’s tripod. The front side of the devices comes with two USB 3.0 ports, a MicroSD card slot, and what looks like a standard thread to mount cameras… The rear panel includes a USB-C port for power, WAN and LAN Gigabit Ethernet ports, and a reset button. NanoPi R4S SBC inside its metal enclosure together with a 16GB class A1 microSD card that, as I found later, comes preloaded with FriendlyWrt. NanoPi R4S gateway unboxingīefore testing the software, let’s see what I’ve received. That’s just to say it might be better to wait a little longer until Armbian images are released, or until FriendlyELEC fixes some of the shortcomings. First Friendl圜ore based on Ubuntu Core 20.04, but there some issues which we’ll detail in this preview, so I then switch to FriendlyWrt built upon OpenWrt 19.07 which works better, but I still encountered some problems. So instead, I tested the board/gateway with the image from FriendlyELEC. I intended to test thermally performance, Ethernet, and USB like I did for NanoPi R2S and NanoPi NEO3, but Armbian is not available right now, so I could not use some of the tools I normally used right now. Rockchip RK3399 powered NanoPi R4S router SBC launched at the beginning of the month, and FriendlyELEC kindly sent a review sample to CNX Software. ![]()
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December 2022
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