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Feature Article
Raspberry Pi
Pico 2
Review by Tim Blythman
T
he Raspberry Pi Pico 2 microcontroller board was released in August
2024. We reviewed the relatively new
Raspberry Pi 5 single-board computer
(SBC) from the same company in the
May 2025 issue.
The original Pico was released in
2021, followed by the WiFi and Bluetooth equipped Pico W in 2022. Both
these boards are based on the RP2040
microcontroller, the first microcontroller designed by the Raspberry Pi
Foundation. The Raspberry Pi 5 introduced the RP1 microcontroller, acting
as an I/O controller.
Like the Raspberry Pi SBCs, the Pico
was designed to be low cost and easy
to use, with a target price of US$4
(about £3). Not long after its launch,
The Raspberry Pi Pico 2 microcontroller
board is similar to the original Pico (released
in 2021) except that it features the new
RP2350 microcontroller chip. This makes
it considerably faster but it has another
interesting feature: you can select between its
two ARM cores or two RISC-V cores.
it could be programmed in the C
language, with the Arduino IDE and
MicroPython; PicoMite BASIC was
released soon afterwards, around
December 2021.
About a year later, the Pico W was
released. It shares the same form
factor and processor as the Pico but
includes an Infineon CYW43439
radio module, adding WiFi and Bluetooth support.
The bare RP2040 microcontroller
later became available for purchase
at around 50 pence, from the likes of
DigiKey and Mouser. That led to its
incorporation into many third-party
boards.
We created the Pico BackPack,
which adds features like an LCD
touchscreen, microSD card socket
and audio output to a Pico or Pico
W. That was detailed in the
March 2023 issue, with the
related Pico W BackPack introduced in January 2024.
We have used the Pico and
Pico W in various projects,
i n c l u d i n g t h e We b M i t e
(August 2024), VGA Pico
Mite (December 2024) and
Pico Gamer (March 2025). So we were
very interested to see what the Pico
2 has to offer.
There are a lot of similarities; it has
the same layout and footprint as the
Pico & Pico W. Apart from the silkscreen being marked as a Pico 2, you
might not even know it was a different
board! It appears the Pico 2 is backwards compatible with the Pico; we
shall investigate that later.
The Pico 2 was intended to be sold
for US$5, and we purchased our test
boards for about £4 (excluding delivery), which is much the same price at
the time of writing.
The RP2350
The new RP2350 microcontroller is
actually a series of four new parts; it
is the RP2350A variant that is fitted to
the Pico 2. Table 1 shows a comparison
between the RP2040 and the members
of the RP2350 family.
Like their respective microcontroller boards, there is a lot of similarity between the RP2040 and the
RP2350. The two important differences are in the processor and
the inbuilt RAM; these explain the
The Pico 2 (left) looks very similar to
the Pico (right). The notable
differences are in
the silkscreen and
that the Pico 2 uses
smaller passives.
The different core
power supply is visible
in the components
above and to the right of
the RP2350. The larger
component in that area is an inductor that’s used in the switching mode of
the RP2350 core supply.
50
Practical Electronics | February | 2026
The Raspberry Pi Pico 2 module
differences between the part numbers.
The RP2350 has a dual ARM
Cortex M33 processor compared to
the RP2040’s dual ARM Cortex M0+
(hence the ‘3’ in RP2350), while the
‘5’ indicates that it has twice as much
RAM (see Fig.1). Its data sheet can be
found at https://pemag.au/link/ac1u
The QSPI controller (which is used
to communicate with an external flash
memory chip) has been provided with
a second interface. This can be used
to connect a second flash chip or a
PSRAM (pseudo-static random access
memory), to expand the memory available to the system.
8MiB (64Mbit) PSRAM chips are
available for a few dollars. That is a
phenomenal amount of RAM for a microcontroller, but note that the Pico 2
board does not have provision for a
PSRAM chip to be fitted.
The RP2350 also has a dual Hazard3
RISC-V (pronounced ‘risk five’) processor that can be selected at boot
time. RISC-V is an open RISC (reduced instruction set computer) architecture that is gaining traction as
an alternative to other proprietary architectures. In theory, one core can be
a RISC-V processor and the other, an
ARM processor.
The new M33 ARM processor has
native floating-point instructions that
the M0+ processor in the RP2040 lacks;
floating-point support for the RP2040
is provided by software routines in
ROM. That means a big uplift in performance when performing floatingpoint calculations.
The M33 also includes Arm TrustZone and secure boot, using an OTP
(one-time programmable) memory
to store an encryption key. The M33
processor also performs better (at the
same processor clock speed) than the
M0+ in tests such as the Dhrystone
benchmarks. The security features are
not available when the RISC-V cores
are used.
The RP2350 has a nominal maximum clock speed of 150MHz, although
we have already read reports that it
can be overclocked (much like the
RP2040). There are reports of operation up to 300MHz. Such overclocking is also subject to the limits of the
flash memory chip.
Two of the RP2350 variants boast a
larger chip with more I/O pins; those
have the ‘B’ suffix. These have 48
general-purpose I/O pins, compared to
just 30 on the RP2040 and ‘A’ variants.
Practical Electronics | February | 2026
Table 1 – RP2040 and RP2350 family comparison
RP2040
RP2350A
RP2350B
Dual ARM
Cortex M0+
Dual ARM Cortex M33 and Hazard3 RISC-V
External only
RP2354A
RP2354B
2MiB internal
Processor
(CPU)
Flash memory
264kiB
520kiB plus external PSRAM
RAM
133MHz
150MHz
Clock
56
60
80
60
80
Pins
30
30
48
30
48
GPIO
2
UART
2
SPI
2
I2C
16
24
4
4
PWM
8
4
8
ADC channels
Full-speed host or device
USB
8
12
PIO state
machines
–
HSTX peripheral, secure boot with OTP
storage, hardware random number generator
Other
Then there are the RP2354 variants, which bond a 2MiB (16Mbit)
Winbond W25Q16JVWI QSPI NOR
flash memory chip to the RP2350
processor die; this die is otherwise identical to a bare RP2350A or
RP2350B chip. Thus, the four variants of the RP2350 are the 60-pin
‘A’ versions and 80-pin ‘B’ versions,
either with (RP2354) or without
(RP2350) an attached flash memory
chip.
Having only four ADC (analog-todigital converter) channels on the
RP2040 saw the Pico falling short
compared to many other microcontrollers’ analog abilities. The larger
RP2350B variants now have eight
ADC channels, which means that
the Pico 2 is still stuck with only
four channels.
Some errors have been identified in the analog-to-digital con-
Fig.1: the part naming of the RP2350
(and RP2040) is based on this scheme.
The RP2354 parts have 2MiB (24 ×
128kB) of non-volatile storage in the
form of a flash memory chip bonded
to the processor die.
verter (ADC) silicon hardware of
the RP2040. The RP2350 data sheet
indicates that those have been fixed
in the newer chip.
The novel PIO (programmable
input output) peripheral saw a lot
of attention, and has been put to
good use in emulating all sorts of
peripheral functions. That includes
SPI, USB and even the protocol that
is used to control WS2812 programmable LEDs.
The RP2350 provides 12 PIO state
machines, up from the RP2040’s eight.
There are also some minor updates to
the PIO peripheral itself.
The RP2350 also has a new HSTX
peripheral; this stands for ‘high-speed
serial transmit’. It can stream data out
on eight I/O pins at up to 300MHz
(using double-data-rate output registers). There is example code to use
the HSTX to generate DVI-compatible
video.
The RP2350 data sheet notes that
each processor core implements a
TMDS (transition minimised differential signalling) encoding algorithm. TMDS is an encoding used
with HDMI and DVI video, so clearly
there is an intention for the RP2350
to be able to directly produce video
output.
Power management on the RP2350
has been improved by splitting the
power domains and allowing some
parts to be selectively powered off,
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Feature Article
1
2
39
USB
BOOTSEL
LED
DEBUG
thus potentially using less power than
the RP2040 in sleep mode.
The Pico 2
Unsurprisingly, the biggest difference between the Pico and Pico 2 is
the new processor chip. As well as
doubling the RAM, the Pico 2 has
double the available flash memory,
with a 4MiB (32Mbit) flash memory
chip onboard. The data sheet for
the Pico 2 can be downloaded from
https://pemag.au/link/ac1v
That’s about the extent of the
changes between the two boards.
The same RT6150 buck/boost regulator allows the Pico 2 to operate
from anywhere between 1.8V and
5.5V. Similar to the Pico, the Pico 2
also has a diode between the VBUS
and VSYS pins.
The Pico 2 appears to use smaller passive components, and there is
some extra circuitry related to the
RP2350’s core 1.1V power supply,
which has a regulator that can operate in both linear and switching
modes, allowing it to achieve better
efficiency.
The rear of the Pico 2 has test points
in the same place as the Pico, with
the addition of an extra test point in
the area of the switching regulator’s
circuitry. Otherwise, a 2024 copyright notice is the most prominent
difference.
From what we can see, there isn’t
even a new pinout diagram for the
Pico 2; the Pico diagram has simply
been annotated to include the Pico
2. So it appears that there are no
electrical or mechanical reasons
52
that rule out using a Pico 2 in place
of a Pico.
Fig.2 shows the pinout. It does
not note the HSTX-capable pins,
presumably to retain the consistency between the Pico and Pico 2
diagrams. The HSTX pins are fixed
to GPIOs 12-19.
A fault in the silicon
While the Pico 2 may appear to be
better in all ways than the Pico, there
was a severe erratum in the original
revision of the chip that has now been
resolved by the release of a new stepping. The data sheet notes this as erratum RP2350-E9, and it applies to
stepping A2.
An excessive leakage current is
sourced from a digital input pin if its
voltage is in the undefined input voltage region, between valid high and
low levels.
When connected to a high impedance source, this could result in erroneous readings. It is especially a
problem if the internal pull-down
is active, since the weak pull-down
cannot overcome the leakage and the
pin remains stuck in the undefined
input voltage region (around 2.2V for
a 3.3V supply).
Software fixes can be applied to
some but not all situations. The general advice is to use an external pulldown resistor of no more than 8.2kW
instead of the internal pull-down when
required.
The good news is that basically all
Pico 2 modules and RP2350 chips
you will find on the market today
are the A3 stepping or later, so they
Fig.2: the Pico and Pico 2 share
this pinout diagram, meaning
that I/O and peripheral mappings
are identical. The new HSTX
peripheral is not shown; it uses
the GP12-GP19 pins of the Pico 2.
Source: www.raspberrypi.com/
documentation/microcontrollers/
pico-series.html
Fig.3: an easy way to tell the Pico
from the Pico 2 is the drive volume
label displayed by the bootloader.
The RP2350 label indicates that it’s a
Pico 2. A Pico or other RP2040-based
board would show this as RPI-RP2.
do not suffer from this leakage current problem.
The bug that caused poor ADC performance in the RP2040 has also been
fixed in the RP2350.
Security
We aren’t surprised that security
was a low priority for the Raspberry
Pi Foundation in creating a cheap and
easy to use board in the Pico. The Arm
TrustZone and secure boot features of
the RP2350 intend to address one of
the claimed weaknesses of the RP2040:
a lack of security for the program flash
memory.
For example, reading or modifying
the program in the flash chip (on the
original Pico) would be as easy as accessing the flash chip and performing
read or write commands.
The security on the RP2350 depends on the flash memory contents
being encrypted and signed. The encryption means that the data stored
on the chip is meaningless until the
processor decrypts it. The signing
process is a way to tell if the data
has been modified, and generally involves creating a hash or checksum
of the data that can indicate if it has
been changed.
The signing is necessary as the encryption only means that the data
cannot be easily read. It would still be
possible, for example, to write random
data to the flash chip in the hope of
provoking insecure behaviour. The
signing prevents any modified data
from being run.
The OTP (one-time-programmable)
memory of the RP2350 can be used to
Practical Electronics | February | 2026
The Raspberry Pi Pico 2 module
Photos 1-4 (left-to-right):
» the Seeed Technology XIAO RP2350 is one of the smaller RP2350 boards and has a USB-C socket. It appears that it
will not cost much more than a Pico 2.
» Pimoroni’s PGA2350 RP2350B is a compact but comprehensive breakout board for the 80-pin RP2350B. It includes
16MiB of flash memory and an 8MiB PSRAM chip.
» the Pimoroni Tiny 2350 appears to be pin-compatible with their Tiny 2040. We noted the Tiny 2040 in our original
review of the Pico; it was one of the early RP2040 boards.
» Sparkfun’s Pro Micro RP2350 has a USB-C socket and incorporates a PSRAM chip, giving access to over 8MiB of
random access memory. It also has a 16MiB flash memory chip.
store the keys needed to decrypt and
check flash data, among other things.
The OTP can be locked and hidden by
programming specific bits.
To test the security, the Raspberry Pi Foundation launched a competition with a $20,000 prize to see
if anyone can break into the locked
OTP memory.
One of the great features of the
RP2040 on the original Pico is the
ROM bootloader, which makes it almost
impossible to ‘brick’. The OTP provides a means to permanently modify
the RP2350’s behaviour, so it’s possible that a wrong OTP operation could
brick the RP2350. However, we understand that has been deliberately made
difficult to do.
Hands-on testing
We are in the process of doing
some detailed testing of the Pico 2
with our previous Pico projects, including the Pico Audio Analyser,
which should hopefully improve its
performance.
To summarise what we’ve found,
the Pico 2 works just about seamlessly
in all cases where we had previously
used a Pico! Of course, the differing
architectures mean that code recompilation is required, but we generally
have not had to make any changes to
the code itself.
For example, we fitted a Pico 2 to
the prototype of one of our projects
under development and compiled
the exact same Arduino sketch files
(without any changes whatsoever)
and the Pico 2 worked exactly as
expected. Similarly, the example
Practical Electronics | February | 2026
MicroPython program and libraries that we created for the BackPack worked without any changes
on the Pico 2.
The process for setting up the Pico-
series C SDK (software development
kit) on a Windows machine has changed
substantially. Still, apart from that,
we had little trouble in compiling
the exact same code as we used with
a Pico.
With just one click, we were able
to create a separate project to use
the RISC-V processor (instead of the
ARM processor) and that too compiled flawlessly and worked identically. Curiously, the compiled
RISC-V code is about half the size
of the ARM code.
Elsewhere in this issue, you will find
an article describing a version of Pico
Mite BASIC for the RP2350. There is an
HDMI video version, using the HSTX
peripheral (in addition to VGA), and
PicoMite BASIC has been bumped to
version 6.0.x.
Pico 2 W
The related Pico 2 W was launched
in November 2024, featuring the same
Infineon CYW43439 radio module
that was used in the Pico W. So, as
you would expect, it brings the features of the Pico W with the benefits
of the new, faster and more powerful
RP2350 chip.
Bare RP2350 chips in all four variants
are available, including from DigiKey,
Mouser and LCSC. As LCSC is owned
by the same company as JLCPCB, you
can also get PCBs assembled using
RP2350 chips from JLC.
Other RP2350 boards
Other companies have already announced RP2350-based products. It
appears some firms have had access
to the RP2350 for some time before
the launch, allowing them to develop
a range of products, test out the chips
and their software.
It was the makers of the Bus Pirate
(https://buspirate.com) who identified
the erratum mentioned earlier. Bus
Pirate is an open-source digital tool
for working with microcontrollers and
other digital ICs.
Photos 1-4 show some of the new
boards that have been announced. At
the time of writing, we have not seen
any of these boards available to purchase.
Conclusion
The Pico 2 is better than the Pico
in pretty much every way, as long
you get the A3 stepping (or later)
that fixes the input pin leakage current problem that was identified in
the A2 versions.
The extra RAM and improved ADC
are well worth the extra couple of
dollars to buy the Pico 2 module over
the Pico (unless you have an application in mind which simply doesn’t
require them).
While it might appear that the Pico 2
could easily obsolete the Pico, there is
a note on the Pico’s product page that
it will be available until January 2036.
The Pico 2 is similarly noted as being
available until January 2040.
The Pico 2 is available from Farnell,
TME, DigiKey, Mouser and numerous
PE
smaller electronics outlets.
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