The official documentation for the Raspberry Pi 4 Model B does not include a "full" schematic in the traditional sense, as the core design (SoC and memory traces) is proprietary. Instead, Raspberry Pi releases which cover the I/O connectors and major user-facing components. Official Hardware Resources
indicates a healthy power supply, while a flashing green LED indicates SD card activity. 3. Interface Schematics and Connectivity Raspberry Pi 4 Model B Full Schematic
What makes this interesting is the sheer density of connections. High-speed memory routing requires precise impedance matching and length tuning—something you can't see on the schematic, but the number of lines gives you an appreciation for the engineering required to prevent signal integrity issues. The official documentation for the Raspberry Pi 4
If you look closely at the schematic, you can trace how the PCIe interface of the CPU connects to this hub. This explains why the Pi 4 can handle high-speed storage devices, and it is the basis for many cool projects involving custom USB configurations. If you look closely at the schematic, you
As of 2026, Raspberry Pi Trading Ltd. provides reduced schematics (covering essential connections like power, HDMI, and USB) rather than the complete, granular PCB design files. Official Reduced Schematic (PDF): Download the RP-008345-DS Reduced Schematics Mechanical Drawings (PDF/Step): Download Technical Drawings (via PIP Portal) 3D Models (STEP/SLDPRT): GrabCAD Raspberry Pi 4 Model B Library ⚡ Hardware Breakdown: What’s Under the Hood?
The Pi 4 schematic highlights the move to LPDDR4 RAM. Depending on your model, you’ll see routing for 2GB, 4GB, or 8GB modules. USB 3.0 and Ethernet