I've built a couple Raspberry Pi's to use with Pianoteq and also a couple to use as streamers (more specifically Roon endpoints).
Even for streamers most people using hats I encountered were much more interested in hats for sending digital audio to an external DAC. Very few people were interested in a hat with a built-in DAC. Some audiophiles think that the audio quality is improved using S/PDIF or AES/EBU versus a USB DAC. That might have been true for the Raspberry Pi3 which had USB contention issues but people do it with the Pi4 as well.
For Pianoteq I don't think a Raspberry Pi is a very good choice right now, largely because it hasn't been updated in so long and so there are many newer small-form-factor computers that have much higher performance in the same price ballpark. The Pi4 prices do appear to have come down some versus the ridiculous prices they were going for during the shortage not that long ago.
After trying the Pi4's, one that I got which I really liked is called the MeLE Quieter3C. Here are some of the advantages versus a Pi4:
- vastly better performance
- it comes preassembled
- the case is much slimmer and more attractive than any Pi4 case I've ever seen
- it uses an Intel CPU so you can run Windows if you want (it comes preinstalled), or you can run just about any flavor of Linux (Ubuntu Mate is a pretty close match if you like the standard Raspberry Pi flavor of Linux).
- it comes with eMMC storage and you can also add internal NVMe SSD storage. Both are way faster than Micro SD cards or USB-based storage for the Pi4.

Last edited by kanefsky (01-08-2023 20:06)