One of the easiest ways I found to install Raspberry Pi OS to a USB Drive and then boot from that. You can then use the SD Card Copier utility in Raspberry Pi OS to copy to the eMMC.
Great was wondering how that was done. I was just booting from my 1 TB Nvme drive. Also on your last video you installed a fan on top of the heat sink, but you can't install that in the case that comes with the dev kit. I found a CM5 active cooler that you can get from EDATEC at the PI Shop that works fine for installing in the case. 😀 And its made for the CM5 and is in stock.
Ohh yes.. you are right. The DIY fan wont fit in the case. When I was ordering the cm5 and the io board, the fan was not available. So my DIY fan helped me while putting the cm5 to its paces 😄
@@SmartHomeCircle no problem just thought everyone might like to know about it now 😀 Thanks for the video, interesting to know how to change the speed of the NVMe drive and the fan speed mod is good to. Also changed the CPU speed to 3 GHz and the GPU to 1 GHz. Makes it a lot speeder now
@HATipsByLarry yes.. it good that You mentioned about the fan. I bet it will help others. And nice on the overclock. 🙂 I overclocked my pi5 .. not the cm5 yet.. I have some more projects coming up with the cm5 and want to show how it performs with out-of-the box configuration.
The apt repository containing rpiboot has an older version which does not support cm5. I mentioned this in the video also. Hence I built the rpiboot using the source.
Pretty cool, thanks!
Glad you liked it!
One of the easiest ways I found to install Raspberry Pi OS to a USB Drive and then boot from that. You can then use the SD Card Copier utility in Raspberry Pi OS to copy to the eMMC.
That's also a nice alternative..
Well done 👍.. another great tutorial..
Thank you 🙂
Great was wondering how that was done. I was just booting from my 1 TB Nvme drive. Also on your last video you installed a fan on top of the heat sink, but you can't install that in the case that comes with the dev kit. I found a CM5 active cooler that you can get from EDATEC at the PI Shop that works fine for installing in the case. 😀 And its made for the CM5 and is in stock.
Ohh yes.. you are right. The DIY fan wont fit in the case.
When I was ordering the cm5 and the io board, the fan was not available. So my DIY fan helped me while putting the cm5 to its paces 😄
@@SmartHomeCircle no problem just thought everyone might like to know about it now 😀 Thanks for the video, interesting to know how to change the speed of the NVMe drive and the fan speed mod is good to. Also changed the CPU speed to 3 GHz and the GPU to 1 GHz. Makes it a lot speeder now
@HATipsByLarry yes.. it good that You mentioned about the fan. I bet it will help others.
And nice on the overclock. 🙂 I overclocked my pi5 .. not the cm5 yet.. I have some more projects coming up with the cm5 and want to show how it performs with out-of-the box configuration.
Good Job 👍👍👍
Thanks 👍
if i use the rpiboot which install for apt, it is ok to burning os to eMMC?
The apt repository containing rpiboot has an older version which does not support cm5. I mentioned this in the video also. Hence I built the rpiboot using the source.
@ i got it,thanks
Can we install kali linux insted of raspberry os
Yes.. There are images for Raspberry pi 5 and the same would work for CM5.