Support — Cm2 Dongle

Here’s why people get stuck: A standard USB-C hub (like one from Anker or Dell) works with phones and laptops. Plug it into a Raspberry Pi CM4 carrier board… and nothing happens .

| Symptom | Likely Fix | |---------|-------------| | No HDMI, but USB works | Reboot with HDMI and power connected before boot | | No USB, but HDMI works | Dongle needs external power; don’t rely on carrier board back-power | | Flashing or corrupted display | Lower resolution in config.txt; try hdmi_mode=4 (720p) first | | Dongle gets hot | Normal for C2M dongles—they are passive and lack power regulation. Unplug when not in use | cm2 dongle support

Remember the golden rule: . Get the order right, and you’ll save hours of frustration. Here’s why people get stuck: A standard USB-C

It hardwires the connections without complex negotiation, so the compute module sees a simple HDMI signal and USB data lines. Unplug when not in use | Remember the golden rule:

Here’s a helpful, practical blog post aimed at makers, retro-computing enthusiasts, or single-board computer (SBC) users. C2M Dongle Support: What It Is, Why You Need It, and How to Get It Working

At first glance, it looks like a typo for “USB-C to HDMI.” But C2M (Computer-to-Module) dongle support is something entirely different—and if you work with developer boards like the Raspberry Pi CM4 or CM5, it’s a game-changer.

Have a C2M dongle success story or a tricky setup? Drop a comment below—especially if you’ve tested it with a CM5 or a non-Raspberry Pi module like the Orange Pi CM4.

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