The M5Stack Tab5 - Tao of Mac
Rui Carmo
Tao of Mac
Jul 18th 2026 · 13 min read<br>·<br>#electronics<br>#embedded<br>#emulation<br>#esp32<br>#hardware<br>#iot<br>#m5stack<br>#reviews<br>#risc-v
The M5Stack Tab5
Hot on the heels of my ESP32 display detour–which went from Cydintosh to Flying Toasters on an ESP32-S3 and then, inevitably, R-Type–I ended up with an M5Stack Tab5 on my desk as a very indirect consequence of chasing e-paper displays.
I have followed M5Stack for years and have a couple of their ESP cameras running, plus one of the original stackable Core modules (complete with battery) somewhere in a drawer, but I had not written code for any of them in quite a while (the cameras are running ten-year-old code at this point, I think, and have been rock solid).
Getting my hands on a Tab5 was completely random, but I spent the next couple of weeks trying it as a Home Assistant terminal, a firmware playground and, unexpectedly, a tiny HDMI monitor.
Disclaimer: M5Stack sent me a review unit of the Tab5, for which I thank them. And, as usual, this article follows my review policy.
Form Factor<br>The screen is quite bright and hard to photograph--and the demo app is rather nice
I have a weakness for portable gadgetry, and the Tab5 is very much to my tastes–it looks like a chunky little Android tablet and boots into something closer to an industrial HMI, with a polished demo app that lets you test all the sensors and hardware, but underneath it is "just" an ESP32.
Except this is the ESP32-P4, rather than the somewhat vanilla chips you get with cheap yellow displays, and it can plausibly drive a 720p MIPI display and a camera while handling audio. The CYD boards are pretty good bang for the buck, but even before I started abusing them for emulation I spent most of my time fighting their constraints–a slow parallel or SPI panel, single-digit megabytes of PSRAM and a UI that visibly lurches whenever Wi-Fi wakes up.
I did not run into those problems with the P4. The Tab5 adds a MIPI-DSI panel, 32MB of PSRAM and a dedicated ESP32-C6 radio co-processor, and feels much closer to a small Raspberry Pi than to a vanilla ESP8266.
There is, of course, a catch–the slot-in battery makes the Tab5 grow from 128x80x12mm bare to 128x80x31mm, and mine went from 118g to 230g with the third-party battery I used.
Hardware<br>The Tab5 is a little constellation of chips:
ESP32-P4NRW32 with two 360MHz high-performance RISC-V cores and a separate 40MHz low-power core
ESP32-C6-MINI-1U radio co-processor over SDIO, providing 2.4GHz Wi-Fi 6, Thread and Zigbee
16MB flash and 32MB octal PSRAM
5-inch 720x1280 portrait-native IPS panel over MIPI-DSI, with capacitive touch
SC2356 2MP camera
ES8388 audio codec, ES7210 ADC, dual microphones and a 1W speaker
BMI270 six-axis IMU and RX8130CE RTC
IP2326 charge management and INA226 current/voltage monitoring for an NP-F550 7.4V 2000mAh (14.8Wh) battery
Besides a 3.5mm audio jack (a thing that Apple still seems unable to include in its devices), it has a pretty impressive array of connectors:
microSD slot
USB-C with USB 2.0 OTG
USB-A host port, which is unusual enough on an ESP32 device
RS-485 via a SIT3088, with a switchable 120-ohm terminator and 6-24V input
30-pin M-BUS connector that harks back to M5Stack’s stackable module line
a small menagerie of Grove-style connectors for specific applications, including access to the USB bus
two software-selectable MMCX ports complementing the internal antenna
Pragmatic Touches<br>The trademark M5 diagrammatic labelling
Besides the (always awesome) way in which M5 tends to label their devices, there are two things about the form factor that deserve to be called out.
The first is the NP-F550 slot–yes, the classic Sony camcorder pack people my age typically have three of in a drawer. The batteries are cheap, hot-swappable and available everywhere, which is a smart bit of BOM design even if they do make the assembled setup chunky.
I did not have any, so I got two USB-C rechargeable packs that were already on my "someday" list for powering a camera light, and they fit perfectly:
OK, fine, it's a bit of a bulge
M5Stack quotes the Tab5 at 118.4g bare and 217.3g with their standard battery kit; my third-party USB-C battery brings it to 230g.
The second thing is the 1/4-inch tripod mount next to the microSD slot. Together, the battery and tripod mount make the Tab5 feel like a field device, while the sheer number of connectors still makes it useful on the bench. There are also six threaded inserts around the edge and four around the M-BUS connector, giving you plenty of options beyond the tripod mount.
Internals<br>I didn’t open mine, but according to CNX Software’s teardown, there is a flexible PCB carrying the GT911 touch controller, the SC2356 on an FPC cable and the C6 module wired to both the internal 3D antenna and external MMCX connectors–so tearing it down seems like a lesson in patience that I decided to forego.
Thermals<br>This is probably the...