M5Stack Cardputer ADV vs v1.1: Which RF Module Actually Fits? (2026)
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PINGEQUA Lab · M5Stack compatibility · 6 min read · Updated 2026-06-25
Bought a Cardputer RF cap that won't seat or won't show up in Bruce? Before you assume it's broken, check this: the M5Stack Cardputer ADV and the older v1.1 use different expansion headers, so a module built for one will not work on the other.
Why ADV ≠ v1.1 (the hardware difference that matters)
Both boards share the same ESP32-S3-based StampS3 core, so people assume accessories swap freely. For RF caps, they don't. The decisive change is the expansion interface:
- The original Cardputer / v1.1 exposes expansion through the HY2.0-4P Grove port only.
- The Cardputer ADV keeps Grove and adds a rear 2×7-pin header carrying UART, I²C, and SPI for peripherals.
An RF cap needs the SPI bus plus chip-select lines to drive a CC1101 / nRF24L01+. On the ADV that SPI is broken out on the rear header the cap clips onto; the v1.1 doesn't route SPI to the same physical interface. That's why forcing the wrong cap on either board fails to enumerate the radios.
Other ADV-only changes (useful for identifying your unit): a single 1750 mAh battery, an ES8311 audio codec, and a BMI270 6-axis IMU — none present on the v1.1, which uses a 120 mAh + 1400 mAh battery split and an SPM1423 mic.
Note: the Cardputer v1.1 is now End-of-Life — M5Stack has moved to the ADV. Both still run Bruce, and v1.1 modules are still sold, so this compatibility question stays relevant for the large installed base of v1.1 units.
How to tell which Cardputer you have
| Tell | Cardputer v1.1 | Cardputer ADV |
|---|---|---|
| Rear 2×7-pin header (UART/I²C/SPI) | No — Grove only | Yes |
| Battery | 120 mAh + 1400 mAh base | Single 1750 mAh |
| IMU (motion sensor) | No | BMI270 |
| Audio codec | SPM1423 mic / NS4168 | ES8311 / NS4150B / 1 W |
| Status | End-of-Life | Current |
If your unit has the rear 2×7 header and a single fat battery, it's an ADV. If expansion is Grove-only, it's a v1.1 (or earlier).
Compatibility map — which RF module to buy
| Your device | Correct PINGEQUA module | Sub-GHz band |
|---|---|---|
| Cardputer ADV | Hydra RF 424 | 433 MHz |
| Cardputer ADV | Hydra RF 824 | 868 MHz (EU) |
| Cardputer ADV | Hydra RF 924 Pro | 915 MHz (US/Americas) |
| Cardputer v1.1 | 3-in-1 RF Module | 433 MHz |
| M5Stack StickS3 | RF Pack S3 (not a Cardputer cap) | 433 MHz |
| M5StickC Plus / Plus 2 | Stick RF 424 (not a Cardputer cap) | 433 MHz |
The Hydra caps are ADV-only by design — the 424 is explicitly not compatible with Cardputer v1.1 or earlier. The 3-in-1 module is built for the v1.1 headers. Pick the row that matches your board.
Used the wrong module? Here's the fix order
Installing an ADV cap on a v1.1 (or the reverse) typically produces "CC1101 not found" / "nRF24 not detected" in Bruce, a cap that won't seat flush, or a Cardputer that boots fine but has no working RF function. This is not a dead module. Work in this order:
- Confirm model match using the table above — this resolves most cases.
- If the model is correct but radios still don't show, it's a firmware / pin-map issue, not hardware. Flash the current Bruce build and set the right pins — full steps in Bruce on M5Stack: flash it and fix "module not found".
- Only after both check out is it worth suspecting the hardware.
FAQ
Does the Hydra RF cap fit a Cardputer v1.1?
Will the v1.1 3-in-1 module work on a Cardputer ADV?
How do I know if I have a Cardputer ADV or v1.1?
My RF module says "not found" — did I buy the wrong one?
Do both Cardputer versions use Bruce firmware?
Which frequency should I pick — 424, 824, or 924?
Is the Cardputer ADV worth it over the v1.1?
Can the Cardputer do Sub-GHz like a Flipper Zero?
Match your board, get the right cap
Every PINGEQUA Cardputer module ships Bruce-ready with a setup and pin-config guide.
Cardputer ADV — Hydra RF 424 → Cardputer v1.1 — 3-in-1 →Sources & further reading: M5Stack Cardputer-Adv specs — docs.m5stack.com; Cardputer v1.1 — docs.m5stack.com; ADV launch details — CNX Software; ADV vs v1.1 comparison — OpenELAB; open-source reference — pingequalab on GitHub. Hardware facts verified June 2026.
For authorized security testing and education only. Use RF hardware only on devices and frequencies you are permitted to operate. You are responsible for compliance with all applicable laws and radio regulations (e.g. FCC Part 15 in the US, CE/RED in the EU). "M5Stack", "Cardputer" and "Flipper Zero" are referenced for compatibility; PINGEQUA is independent and not affiliated with or endorsed by their owners.