Close
0%
0%

Crosberry Pi

A cyberdeck made from a gutted Crosley record player and a Raspberry Pi, with working volume knob and original speakers

Similar projects worth following
This cyberdeck started as a renovation of a mediocre record player into a housing for a Raspberry Pi. It also became a functional set of computer speakers, and It turned into my work computer for script supervision. It's favorite music is lofi hip hop.

The Crosberry Pi is a cyberdeck in a Crosley record player with a 10.1 inch screen, an ortholinear mechanical keyboard, and a track ball mouse. The Crosley's original speakers were retained and are wired to the Raspberry Pi 4 that runs the deck, and both the tone and volume knobs work. The machine can be easily transported with the original handle and closures. When open, the screen sits at a predefined fixed angle, held in place by a custom cut of ribbon.  

  • 1 × Raspberry Pi 4 The computer for the deck
  • 1 × Crosley CR40 Record Player Case, hinges, speakers, and tone and volume knobs for the deck
  • 1 × Logitech Marble Mouse Rollerball mouse removed from its housing and installed in the deck
  • 1 × PS2 to USB adapter Converter for the Logitech Marble Mouse
  • 1 × Drop + Olkb Preonic / Planck Keyboard Ortholinear mechanical keyboard with LED lighting

View all 14 components

  • Planck for Preonic

    Mx. Jack Nelson07/14/2023 at 04:28 0 comments

    I spent the day reconfiguring the keyboard, because the Preonic has mysteriously ceased working. I did everything I could find to do, and finally ordered a replacement keyboard. I received it today, but it turned out I had ordered a Planck instead of a Preonic, so now I have a keyboard with one fewer row than I was expecting. I like the smaller form factor, it turns out, and I may be able to fit in some neat extra features with the additional space. 

    Back up and running with the Planck keyboard, but without the under lighting turned on. I haven't been able to figure out the reconfiguration of the keyboard with QMK, so even though the Planck has under lighting LEDs I don't have a way to turn them on yet. That will be a project for tomorrow. In the meantime, I tossed in a glowy keychain.  

  • Rolling with it

    Mx. Jack Nelson07/06/2023 at 04:27 0 comments

    I acquired and lost my first trackball mouse in the 90s, and I replaced it in 2021 with a Logitech Marble Mouse. I was using the mouse at my main computer and imagined it could work really well in the confined space of a deck that wasn't going to get a trackpad. I took it apart and removed the business components, then measured where I wanted the wires for the ball and each of its two side buttons to sit. At that point, the top surface of the deck was made out of a pizza box, so I cut a channel in the cardboard for the mouse wires to fold through. That way I could leave the circuit board under the pizza box layer. 

    Later I used the cardboard as a template and cut the final top surface out of plexiglass. I dremeled a little channel in the plexiglass for the cables to slide through and housed its circuit board on the underside of the plexiglass with some gaff tape. 

    Yes, the buttons are hard to press. But, with practice, hitting those little red switches became second nature for me.

  • Mid Media Machine

    Mx. Jack Nelson07/06/2023 at 04:08 0 comments

    The Crosberry Pi is a media machine, in that it does a great job of playing lofi hip hop and radio broadcasts at a decent volume and with that classic Crosley sound. Making use of the speakers in the case was my brilliant wife's idea. We used a donor 3.5mm audio cable and soldered it to the existing board, which is easily accessible once you remove the plastic turntable top. I removed the RCA outputs and used the hole in the case for the USB hub's power cable, which powers the entire deck. 


  • Introducing the Crosberry Pi

    Mx. Jack Nelson07/06/2023 at 03:06 0 comments

View all 4 project logs

Enjoy this project?

Share

Discussions

Garra wrote 07/14/2023 at 15:08 point

I really like this. I hadn't really considered using one of those old vinyl player  cases for a cyberdeck, but I might have to look into using one on a future project! :D

  Are you sure? yes | no

Mx. Jack Nelson wrote 07/18/2023 at 18:04 point

I look forward to seeing what you make! I love your project and style. 

  Are you sure? yes | no

Similar Projects

Does this project spark your interest?

Become a member to follow this project and never miss any updates