

❄️ Keep your Pi cool, powered, and looking sharp—because your projects deserve the best!
The Miuzei Raspberry Pi 3 B+ Case combines a clear acrylic shell with a silent 30mm fan and three aluminum heatsinks to provide superior cooling for Raspberry Pi 3 B, 3 B+, and 2 B models. It includes a 5V 3A power supply with an ON/OFF switch for easy power management. Designed for easy assembly and full port accessibility, this case protects your board while enhancing performance and style.











| ASIN | B07BTHNW9W |
| Best Sellers Rank | #41 in Computer Cases |
| Brand | Miuzei |
| Card Description | Dedicated |
| Color | clear white |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (2,712) |
| Date First Available | March 31, 2018 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 7.9 ounces |
| Item model number | raspberry pi 3b case |
| Manufacturer | Miuzei |
| Number of USB 2.0 Ports | 2 |
| Package Dimensions | 6.54 x 4.09 x 1.57 inches |
| Series | raspberry pi 3 case |
| Wireless Type | Bluetooth |
R**N
Very nice quality, great price!
Love this case! It seems difficult to assemble at first, but as long as you keep all of the pieces in the correct order as you assemble, it’s actually very straightforward. If you let all the pieces get mixed up, it could be quite tedious. It feels high quality and looks clean and neat, the three heatsinks are a nice touch with the 30mm fan as well! Even on high mode, it is not very noisy and I can feel the air being dispelled so I have no doubt about the ability to cool the board. This feels much safer than the board just laying around of course and the thickness feels very secure. I’m a big fan of this thing, especially for the price!
J**R
Everything you need but the Pi itself
As a brand new entrant into the world of Raspberry Pis, I didn't really know what I was doing (I still don't, but I didn't then either) and this case had a fan which seemed nice. It is a pain in the ass to put together. I love it. The instructions were excellent and I had absolutely no trouble understanding what to do. I've been messing with computers since they ran 80286s so I'm by no means an amateur but I can see where it's easy to go wrong on this case. I recommend laying out all the layers, one behind the other, putting the screws through the bottom layer to act as guide posts, and going down the line adding pieces. Once you're done, you can take the screws out two at a time and flip them so the heads are on top, or not. No big deal. The heat sinks were the perfect size and the fan worked great. I don't understand why you would possibly want to use the 3.3v pins - I literally could not hear the fan at 5v putting my ear directly against it. The power supply is adequate as far as power goes - I haven't gotten any lightning icons in my tray. The switch is a nice addition since there isn't any way to remove power from the Pi short of yanking the cord. Overall this seems like a great case. I have a sample size of 1 so far so take it for what it's worth but it looks really neat, the fan works great, and CPU temps never really get above 32/33°, which is nice.
G**A
Excellent fit, option power fan with 3.3V quiet
Excellent fit, looks cool. And speaking of cool; nice option to power fan with 3.3 volts, nice and quiet if you don't the extra cooling
C**O
Excellent Kit to keep your Raspberry Pi safe
I've had this Raspberry Pi 3 B+ for about 2 years now but haven't used it much as I didn't have a safe way to operate it in a useful application. Overall it gives excellent protection to the Pi. Basically the equivalent of having your computer motherboard in a PC case as opposed to running it open on your desk. The power supply is exactly as pictured and seems to be decent build quality. Includes a little fan to promote air movement through the included heatsinks. You can power your fan either on the 5V rail for full speed or the 3.3V rail for a slower speed. I went with the slower speed since I'm not pushing this Pi to its limits and it doesn't add hardly any noise. The room has to be completely dead silent to hear it. PROS - Sturdy - Acrylic layer concept is clever and someone entertaining to assemble. - Price is reasonable - Solid Power supply with a switch, saving your USB ports from constant plugging - SD Card accessible - All the ports have large "wells" so large grip connectors will almost always fit. The side with USB-C, HDMI and 3.5mm is recessed in and is about 11.75mm tall with the HDMI port just about dead center of those. I don't think I've ever owned an HDMI cable with a connector shield too big for that. - GPIO pins are accessible from the top AND the side for a ribbon cable. - Camera and TFT display connectors are accessible with slits. - USB and Ethernet ports are FLUSH with the edge, so overly large USB devices *ahem*CellularDongles*ahem* will fit just fine. - Mounting slots so this could be hung on a wall (caution - short hazard if not careful) CONS - Tools required for assembly: #2 Phillips and a 5.5mm Hex (or needle nose plyers) to get a snug fit. The 77-piece HyperTough Repair Kit from Walmart (in a green case) has both of these bits. - Not compatible with Pi-hats, unless you can DIY an adaptation to this case somehow. I don't own any to try but the most common one I think is the PoE hat and I know that won't fit on this case. Not sure if another case in the same design is made for one or not. - No grille or screen for the fan. Not a safety issue per se but it might get quite dusty. If I need a screen I'll cut out a small piece of window screen and sandwich it between the top layer and the fan. Overall I love this case and I have bookmarked it for future re-purchase if I find myself with a few more Pis to protect. Although the instructions are good, I have some tips and tricks for assembly, which you might want to skip the rest of the review if you are in it for the "puzzle" enjoyment factor of it. As you can tell from the listing photos the case is really nothing more than acrylic layers bolted together. 1. My kit came "preassembled" however you have to take it apart completely to get the Pi into it. Take the four screws and nuts off, and set them aside. Lay the pieces in order on your desk so you can maintain an idea of how it assembles. Peel the films off the acrylics. 2. Install the fan on the top most layer, and set it aside. Be careful and pay attention to which side you mount the fan on. The picture in the instructions, Figure B, is accurate so use that as a reference to figure out that you're holding the acrylic sheet properly. The fan is supposed to go INSIDE the case with the Pi, and the fan's label faces inward toward the Pi, away from the acrylic sheet you are mounting it on. This way the air is forced into the Pi and will pass through the heat sinks and exit via the other openings of the case. Trying to pull air out might be less efficient. 3. I used a 5.5mm socket *FINGER TIGHT* to tighten nuts with a #2 Phillips screwdriver in one hand and the 5.5mm socket in the other hand. Finger Tight as I'm sure any amount of real torque can crack the acrylic. 4. Install the heat sinks but only install the ones on the top for now. 5. This kit has slots to hang it on the wall. The slots are 2 plus-shaped cutouts on the bottom layer. Keep in mind there is NO electrical protection between these slots and the Pi itself, so if you intend to mount it, consider electrical tape or something on the bottom of the Pi in this area to prevent a short. 6. When building up the layers, take two of the long bolts and send them up through the bottom side of the first layer, and use them as alignment pegs as you add the first 3 layers, the Pi, and the 6 top layers. Then add the nuts but leave them mostly loose until you can get the last 2 bolts sent up through the same way. As you can see in my photo the bolts on mine go up from the bottom with nuts on top because of this reason. It's opposite than how it's "supposed to be", per the photos and instructions, but I don't see a problem here. You could instead send the second two bolts down the proper way, then reverse the first two. Tighten the bolts the same way as in note 3 above FINGER TIGHT. 7. Finally install the bottom heatsink. You'll see why we waited. You won't have to "carefully" get the heatsink exact on the chip and have to wonder if it'll fit through that hole during case assembly. Put the rubber feet on the bottom and you're good to go!
N**N
Works, great! One complaint...
The case looks great, and I'm glad it came with the fan and heat sinks. You will need to look somewhere online to find the correct GPIO pinout for your particular Raspberry Pi model to power the fan. The only complaint that I have is that I used this in a full arcade cabinet build, and the Pi is powering 2 joystick/button controller boards via USB, as well as a bluetooth keyboard, and I have an unpowered USB hub connected to power 4 very low-powered LED light strips. After connecting the light strips I started noticing major slowdown and stutter in many arcade games -- a sign that the Pi isn't getting enough amperage. The Pi itself can only use a maximum of 1 amp (mine is not overclocked, either), and there's no way 2 controller boards, a bluetooth dongle, and a few LED strips are pulling another 1.5 amps. Therefore, I believe the power adapter that comes with this is not in fact 2.5 amps (probably closer to 1.5A). It's plenty sufficient to power the Pi by itself, even with a few very low-powered peripherals, but if you're getting into USB hub territory to power any extras, I highly recommend getting a better power adapter. The case assembly was easy enough, albeit a little frustrating and confusing at times (you have to assemble all the layers individually, and the instructions aren't that clear about which direction each layer goes. That said, the instructions are fairly sufficient, along with a decent amount of common sense, to get this assembled). Overall a good kit, especially if you like the aesthetic, fans and heatsinks, and you're not going to connect more than 3 or so USB peripherals. I took away 1 star because I definitely believe the included power supply doesn't actually output 2.5A, though.
P**3
I went to put the Pi in and found one of the parts would not fit until I removed a small piece, once done it fit perfectly. The Pi is not a 3, it may be a 2, as it's not marked, it is marked as a Model B+ V1.2 All the same ports as Pi3, Raspberry Pi 2014. Slower than the Pi4 8gb. I'm guessing its almost a Pi2. Maybe a smart Pi guy has a better idea. Oh the case, Is great, looks good, fit and finish is good, easy to assemble, a real Pi3 would be happy in this case! and the fan works great too!
M**D
Works Great !!
M**C
This is an excellent Raspberry Pi case plus kit, it is exceptionally well put together and feels super premium. The included power supply is able to power the Raspberry Pi 3 without any under voltage warning (unlike all the other so called 5V 3A supply that I tried so far), and the clear acrylic case has a very nice fit and finish and looks great, providing good protection as well as access to all the ports. The kits is well thought out and includes all the parts and accessories, heat sinks, stickers, bumpers, clear instructions, screws, fan etc... it even includes an extra screw and nut in case you accidentally drop one. With the included fan at low speed mode, my Raspberry Pi's steady state operating temp decreased from 65C with the bare board only to 48C with this case setup, with no more undervoltage or soft temperature limit warnings. Good fit and finish and visual appearance Good physical protection Good thermal management Good power management Easy assembly with clear instructions This has my full recommendation
R**J
This case was a bit of a puzzle to put together, but reading the instructions a second time around helped. The cooling fan worked well on my heavily over-clocked Pi 3B+. Unfortunately, the supplied power supply wasn't able to keep up with the demands of the over-clocking. And any USB devices plugged in just sent the Pi into limbo. Upgrading the power supply to a 4A unit resolved this. The supplied 3A unit would likely work fine on a stock unmodified Pi 3B
M**E
This case is better than I thought it would be. The design is very sturdy, it feels like I could knock it off a table and not worry about it. I also find it aesthetically pleasing. That said, when it comes to these cases, the bar needn't be set too high, but it's a good value for the price. if you planned on using the GPIO for something other than powering the included fan, such as extending it into a breadboard, you will have to disassemble the case to attach the lead ribbon, but the cutouts are present, and it's clear they had this in mind. The included power supply is great too, it has an integrated power switch, and an adapter so it will work on devices that use either USB Type-C or Micro USB.
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