[Q] Still stuck in logo mode. - Kindle Fire Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

There has been SO many helpful tips here. I even had "ThePooch" help me thru Teamviewer. We spent a good 2-3 hours trying everything that he knows to get the KF to boot. I have the Scorpn Jig factory cable. According to "ThePooch", my computer recognizes it thru the the factory cable and not a regular cable. We are even in the midst of booting my computer throught Linux mint to get this going. Next week sometime, we are going to try again, hopefully. We've gone through most of the ADB, command prompt, KFU options, etc... and still no luck. He was stumped as well. As a last resort, it appears we may have to utilize the firekit and open up the back of the KF. Any other help would be appreciated!!! Big thanks to "ThePooch" for spending time with me in trying to figure out.

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[Question] Kindle Fire is possibly dead.

Guys,
Details: Using Windows 7 64 bits, on a notebook.
Here is the full history of my brand new brick... call me stupid.
Second day with my Kindle Fire, I tryed to root my kindle fire.
Downloaded the KFU 0.9.5, instaled the drivers.
But the KFU wasn't workig... I only was getting the ADB offline status and the "waiting for device" message.
When I realized that the drivers I had were from my Motorola Milestone.
Next step: Uninstall the wrong drivers, and reinstall the new ones.
Only with this i could get the device to work with KFU.
Open the Run application at KFU folder.
Choosed option 2: Install Permanent Root with Superuser.
All worked fine until i get the message "with great powers come great responsabilityies" press any key to continue...
[EDIT: Tried to install Gapps extras... I don't remember if Kindle was dead before this or after]
The Kindle rebooted, got to the screen with the "kindle" word, and died.
Since that I'm getting no power on, no led lights, no response when connected to usb... nothing.
What should I do?
Go to Motorola Tech Support (here in my city) and try to use a factory cable?
or
I can only put my hopes on USB Boot Mode?
Guys, thanks in advance and sorry for my english, I certainly made some msitakes.
Or I can try Firekit?
That's strange, installing the wrong device drivers on your computer shouldn't affect your Kindle.
What it really sounds like is your battery died in the process of installing the FFF bootloader. How was your battery before you started? Have you tried holding the power button for 20 seconds for a hard shutdown?
As far as I know, the only thing that will cause power on issues is a broken bootloader. In which case, USB boot with firekit is your only option.
I guess I had at least 50% o battery charge, or more... I can't remember...
If I push the power button now, the Kindle will get warm, as if it was in use. And if I hold for 20s, will shut down...
I don't even started to install de fire fire fire bootloader, I installed the permanent root with super user and then went to install GApps. I guess my kindle was shutdown before Gapps install.
What should I do? Test the factory cable first?
When you say that I have to use Firekit, you are saying that I have to open my Kindle?
Left the Fire charging for at least 12 hours.
Tried to power on, to hold 20s and nothing happened.
I'll gonna try this:
Fix power on problems: If the Fire's screen never seems to turn on, you may have wrecked the bootloaders or the partitioning. Fortunately most of the time this results in the CPU falling into the low level USB boot mode. Use the "usb_fix_parts_and_install_fff_twrp" to rebuild the flash enough to boot TWRP. You don't need to use the USB shorting trick for this one, just power up the Kindle after running the script.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1430038
My question is: I'm running Ubuntu within VMWare tools. Can I boot from usb stick this way?
Gonna try this before I use factory cable or open my Kindle Fire.
EDIT:
Reading the FIREKIT Topic, this post: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=25814062&postcount=26
My issue is kind of different from his... I'm guessing I'll have to open my Kindle anyway... Started yesterday, but I was messing with the case, gonna find some proper tools
VMs will not work. You have to create a bootable Linux LiveUSB thumb drive.
DuendePaladino said:
Left the Fire charging for at least 12 hours.
Tried to power on, to hold 20s and nothing happened.
I'll gonna try this:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1430038
My question is: I'm running Ubuntu within VMWare tools. Can I boot from usb stick this way?
Gonna try this before I use factory cable or open my Kindle Fire.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you already have a working Ubuntu installation, you don't have to make the USB stick. You can just run the fk binary in your Ubuntu setup.
kinfauns said:
If you already have a working Ubuntu installation, you don't have to make the USB stick. You can just run the fk binary in your Ubuntu setup.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've tried it on a VM and had it confirmed by other users that VMs aren't fast enough to detect the USB in time. From what I've seen, it has always been suggested to either use either a straight Linux install or a bootable LiveUSB.
soupmagnet said:
I've tried it on a VM and had it confirmed by other users that VMs aren't fast enough to detect the USB in time. From what I've seen, it has always been suggested to either use either a straight Linux install or a bootable LiveUSB.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I guess it might depend on the VM, but I disagree with the generalization that VMs are too slow and have issues with USB.
The only thing I've seen is that Oracle's VirtualBox USB implementation breaks adb. I've never tried VMWare, but Parallels Desktop for both my Ubuntu and Windows setups work perfectly. Never had an issue.
DuendePaladino said:
What should I do? Test the factory cable first?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Anybody who is going to be modifying the basic software of their Kindle, or even just root it and play around, should have a factory cable. Xda member SkOrPn makes good ones at a reasonable price and ships them quickly. See http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=25725396&postcount=338.
(From what you wrote earlier, I presume that you don't yet have convenient access to a factory cable but would have to go out of your way to use one. If you do, in fact, have easy access to one, I can't imagine why you wouldn't try using it instead of putting a lot of effort into looking for alternatives.)
aarons510 said:
Anybody who is going to be modifying the basic software of their Kindle, or even just root it and play around, should have a factory cable. Xda member SkOrPn makes good ones at a reasonable price and ships them quickly. See http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=25725396&postcount=338.
(From what you wrote earlier, I presume that you don't yet have convenient access to a factory cable but would have to go out of your way to use one. If you do, in fact, have easy access to one, I can't imagine why you wouldn't try using it instead of putting a lot of effort into looking for alternatives.)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Without a working bootloader, a factory cable is useless.
soupmagnet said:
Without a working bootloader, a factory cable is useless.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
All the scene leads to this... USB Boot.
About the USB stick, I was making some confusion about it.
But, I´ll gonna make one stick right now.
Guys,
I made the usb stick... just figuring how to open the kindle fire, without ruining the case.
But I guess today I'll made the short trick.
Question: I'll keep the 6.3 stock room that i tried to root? Or I'll have to download another ROM?
Is there any know issues about firekit compatibility with ubuntu 12.04?
Like this here? http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=25918331&postcount=10
I WON!!!!
I'M BEOWULF!!!!
Serious now...
Firekit method, with short trick... keep trying... until you find the right spot for the shor... and will work
EDIT:
THANK YOU GUYS!!!
I wouldnt be that happy without your help and your knowledge... You're the real Beowulf!

[Q] Bricked ... tried most things ... need some guidance

Hi,
Some background - I've been tinkering with android roms on phones for a while, and thought i'd give it a go on my Kindle, which I hardly ever use with the stock rom. I have a very low level of understanding regarding rooting, etc., but generally I'm good at following instructions (until now!)
So everything was going along nicely. Because I hardly ever use the device, I decided to do a full wipe before installing the new rom. Then, when I went to flash it, it turns out that I had forgotten to copy the new rom onto the SD card. In a moment of temporary insanity, I turned the device off (don't ask me why, I can't explain it).
On restart, the device now gets stuck on the logo screen. KFU tells me that the device is online, but boot status is unkown, and it can't change the status (although it does reboot the device when I try to put it into fast boot mode- but it doesn't actually 'fastboot').
If I try to reinstall TWRP or anything else, I get the 'exec system\bin\sh failed' error. The Kindle unbrick utility is unable to help.
I did some research and it kept pointing me to a factory cable, which I duly bought off eBay. When I use the factory cable, the only difference is that the boot sequence is slightly different (different levels of backlight) and KFU can't recognise the device at all - it says its offline.
I have no idea if the factory cable I have bought is any good - it might be complete rubbish.
Can any tell me if there is a simple option I have missed? Is trying fixes through Linux the only option? Will I have to open my kindle to fix it? I've already spent a heap of time on it, and I'm just about ready to call it a paperweight. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
I`m a little confused so file me in. Do you have access to recovery? with your type of error "exec system\bin\sh failed" a factory cable is indeed needed to reinstall twrp and the bootloader, unless you can access TWRP and mount your sdcard and transfer a rom. If that is not possible then you have some kind of mounting issue. So I still wonder what happened to your recovery and your bootloader? For me yet not everything is meshing to well. No bootloader, no acces to recovery, kindle just boots to logo and no further. Does the logo flicker and brighten and dim at boot? Yes very likely you will need to run linux on a live usb then run soupkit on it. Still you may still need a real factory cable not one half **s one from ebay you can find that here http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1392693 from user @SkOrPn no one can beat what he does I`m sorry. As for linux and soupkit the where and how is here http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1850038 . Unless you get easily confused then try the iso I created with some fairly easy instructions soupkit is ran already simple create boot and use you can find that here http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1413358 post # 7 make no mistake that this is only for the kindle like the last person I helped with this setup. This is your best route to get your kindle fixed sounds like it could still be a combined effort cable and soupkit .You will know when you hook your kindle up and run some of the features in soupkit if your device is truly online or if a cable is needed. If you run my iso teamviewer is also installed so it provides a nice edition for assistance if you want someone to see what you see. If you choose to run soupkit then the par for instructions differ from those of my iso.
Thepooch said:
I`m a little confused so file me in. Do you have access to recovery? with your type of error "exec system\bin\sh failed" a factory cable is indeed needed to reinstall twrp and the bootloader, unless you can access TWRP and mount your sdcard and transfer a rom. If that is not possible then you have some kind of mounting issue. So I still wonder what happened to your recovery and your bootloader? For me yet not everything is meshing to well. No bootloader, no acces to recovery, kindle just boots to logo and no further. Does the logo flicker and brighten and dim at boot? Yes very likely you will need to run linux on a live usb then run soupkit on it. Still you may still need a real factory cable not one half **s one from ebay you can find that here http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1392693 from user @SkOrPn no one can beat what he does I`m sorry. As for linux and soupkit the where and how is here http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1850038 . Unless you get easily confused then try the iso I created with some fairly easy instructions soupkit is ran already simple create boot and use you can find that here http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1413358 post # 7 make no mistake that this is only for the kindle like the last person I helped with this setup. This is your best route to get your kindle fixed sounds like it could still be a combined effort cable and soupkit .You will know when you hook your kindle up and run some of the features in soupkit if your device is truly online or if a cable is needed. If you run my iso teamviewer is also installed so it provides a nice edition for assistance if you want someone to see what you see. If you choose to run soupkit then the par for instructions differ from those of my iso.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No, I can't access recovery at all. When I use the factory cable, there is no flicker, but all other ways (standard cable, no cable) there is a flicker and it brightens. Either way, it just hangs on the logo.
I suspect that the factory cable is not all it should be ... I will probably try the @SkOrPn option first, then work my way through the other options you mention. I had kind of figured from reading other posts that this would be the case ...
Thanks for taking the tiime to help.
There is no flicker because your likely in fastboot the lack of recognition is drivers which can easily be solved using linux and soupkit. Otherwise straighten out your drivers in windows by running the driver bat packaged with kfu. If your on XP it`s a fight to the death to try to sort out unsigned drivers on that os. Sometimes I can get it fast other times it`s pointlessbut a huge hassle nonetheless. Attempt to fix your drivers while using the factory cable you have maybe you will get lucky.
Fixed! Thanks so much!
I used your pre-installed ISO and it was a piece of cake. Initially, I had the device connected over the factory cable and it wasn't recognising it, but when I swapped to a standard cable, suddenly I was able to reboot into recovery straight away. Rom mounted and installed, and I have a new tablet!
Definitely appreciate all your hard work!
That`s great I`m happy you had good success!!

KF Stuck at Logo - Sorry

I know this has been covered thoroughly in this forum multiple times, and I have really tried to read as many threads as possible before asking.
I rooted my device months ago and finally got a Nexus 7 and want to give my KF to my kids but wanted it stock first. I must have done something in TWRP that removed my bootloader.
I have tried the unbrick tool, I ordered a factory cable from Skorpn (awesome work btw) and by using KFU, my PC can finally see my Kindle.
The problem I'm having is that none of the commands are working and it looks like the bootloader is either bad or completely gone.
It used to turn on and the logo stayed bright. After I used the factory cable it now turns on, blinks, and goes dim.
All the drivers loaded correctly and KFU see's it online.
When I try to reinstall TWRP through KFU it downloads, but is stuck at waiting for device.
***********************************************
* Activating Fastboot (4002) *
***********************************************
2433 KB/s (510876 bytes in 0.205s)
- exec '/system/bin/sh' failed: No such file or directory (2) -
- exec '/system/bin/sh' failed: No such file or directory (2) -
The kindle has been told to reboot in Fastboot Mode.
< waiting for device >
After reading further, I think I formatted too much and wiped the SD card partition. It doesn't seem like there is a bootloader at all.
Did I miss something in all the reading?
Thanks.
So after doing even further reading I found
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1638452
I connected the factory cable and the logo is now staying brightly lit, so I assume it's in FB Mode.
I downloaded TWRP based on the link and FFF, but now I don't know what to do with them.
I went to ADB's site and installed SDK, but I'm not sure how to get the cmd portion to sideload TWRP and then FFF.
I'm doing my best to following along in the instructions and went to the ADB site and installed SDK.
I saved it to my C drive but when I try to do the following, along with "adb devices,
c:\Android\android-sdk-windows>
I get:
'adb' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
operable program or batch file.
Update:
NVM, I had it in the wrong directory.
Once I got that figured out, I did an "adb devices" and no devices came back. Of course I have the factory cable connected and I'm not sure if that matters.
Update:
Ok, now I used a standard USB and it sees my device, but now the logo went back to going dim after reboot.
So it looks like my problem is fairly common, however forum searches don't seem to be helping.
It looks like I wiped too much in TWRP.
Now that I finally figured out ADB, I'm confused about the factory cable.
When it's connected ADB does not see my device but the logo is lit bright yellow. When I use a standard cable ADB sees the device but the turns on and goes dim but the logo is still there.
I've downloaded the ZIP files for TWP and FFF, but I can't seem to figure out how to side load them no matter what I do.
I'm about to give up on this.
I decided to go the Soupkit rout and installed ubuntu 11.10 and got my PC to boot to USB.
I followed all the directions but my device is always offline. The only thing I can think of is that the 3rd step says to reboot, when I reboot Soupkit is gone and I have to download it again. When I download it, I save it, drag it to the desktop and extract it there and then run in terminal, use option 1 and then option 2.
I realize forums contain a ton of duplicate posts but I really tried to research and follow all the guides before posting.
Does anyone have any advice?
Update:
Realized I forgot to add persistence to the LiveUSB drive. I'm going to try again.
Copcheck said:
I'm about to give up on this.
I decided to go the Soupkit rout and installed ubuntu 11.10 and got my PC to boot to USB.
I followed all the directions but my device is always offline. The only thing I can think of is that the 3rd step says to reboot, when I reboot Soupkit is gone and I have to download it again. When I download it, I save it, drag it to the desktop and extract it there and then run in terminal, use option 1 and then option 2.
I realize forums contain a ton of duplicate posts but I really tried to research and follow all the guides before posting.
Does anyone have any advice?
Update:
Realized I forgot to add persistence to the LiveUSB drive. I'm going to try again.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Let me know if this soup kit route works. we have the exact same problem going on here... ill live install ubuntu as well, Ill try my hand here shortly, and give you feedback on my testing.
leroy329 said:
Let me know if this soup kit route works. we have the exact same problem going on here... ill live install ubuntu as well, Ill try my hand here shortly, and give you feedback on my testing.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No luck with adding persistence.
I get everything to to boot in Linux, followed all the instructions, but Soupkit still does not see my Kindle.
I've tried my factory cable and a regular cable. No luck
Some has changed though because now my Kindle logo light is solid bright whereas before it would blink and dim.
Good luck to you!
Well I've had a great dialogue with myself, but I fixed it by accident.
You guys do awesome work and I know its frustrating when people ask repeat questions. I thought I had truly given it my best shot before asking, but in the end it was an accident that seem to have fixed it, that and Skorpns factory cable LOL.
Right before I got ready to pitch it in the trash I figured I would try KFU one more time even though it wasn't seeing my Kindle. Device manager saw the ADB drivers in Android device though.
I plugged in the factory cable
Launched KFU
KFU said "offline"
Tried various options until I finally saw the install permanent root with superuser (option 2)
That did the trick
I then unplugged my factory cable from both the PC and KF and booted the KF into recovery
Plugged in a standard USB
I downloaded a ROM (Hashcodes and GAPPS) and side loaded them
That did it!
I'm not sure how or why since it said it was offline but it fixed it.
Can anyone shed light on why KFU said offline but it still took a root?
Also, regarding the factory cable, I read a ton of material on when to use it and why, but not really how. What I mean is when to plug in and when to revert to the standard cable. If I missed that, my apologies.
Copcheck said:
Well I've had a great dialogue with myself, but I fixed it by accident.
You guys do awesome work and I know its frustrating when people ask repeat questions. I thought I had truly given it my best shot before asking, but in the end it was an accident that seem to have fixed it, that and Skorpns factory cable LOL.
Right before I got ready to pitch it in the trash I figured I would try KFU one more time even though it wasn't seeing my Kindle. Device manager saw the ADB drivers in Android device though.
I plugged in the factory cable
Launched KFU
KFU said "offline"
Tried various options until I finally saw the install permanent root with superuser (option 2)
That did the trick
I then unplugged my factory cable from both the PC and KF and booted the KF into recovery
Plugged in a standard USB
I downloaded a ROM (Hashcodes and GAPPS) and side loaded them
That did it!
I'm not sure how or why since it said it was offline but it fixed it.
Can anyone shed light on why KFU said offline but it still took a root?
Also, regarding the factory cable, I read a ton of material on when to use it and why, but not really how. What I mean is when to plug in and when to revert to the standard cable. If I missed that, my apologies.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
wow im def. gonna try this seeing how we have similar issues with my kindle fire being recognized with a reg usb and online in kfu but with a boot status of unknown and then not seeing it and status being offline when i plus in the factory cable. also with the regular cables it boots to the cm10 boot logo and then with the factory cable it stays at the kindlefire orange and white cable. only thing im confused on is where you say you
"I then unplugged my factory cable from both the PC and KF and booted the KF into recovery"
how did you reboot to recovery? or this was automatic after option 2? thanks and its awesome you were pretty much able to figure this out on your own. i feel i wont have the same luck
Remi85 said:
wow im def. gonna try this seeing how we have similar issues with my kindle fire being recognized with a reg usb and online in kfu but with a boot status of unknown and then not seeing it and status being offline when i plus in the factory cable. also with the regular cables it boots to the cm10 boot logo and then with the factory cable it stays at the kindlefire orange and white cable. only thing im confused on is where you say you
"I then unplugged my factory cable from both the PC and KF and booted the KF into recovery"
how did you reboot to recovery? or this was automatic after option 2? thanks and its awesome you were pretty much able to figure this out on your own. i feel i wont have the same luck
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
When I unplugged the factory cable from the PC and the KF, I could have done 1 of 2 things. Powercycle the KF and hold the power button down to get into TWRP or use a regular USB to side load a ROM and then load it.
Good luck to you, I hope you get it figured out.
Remi85 said:
wow im def. gonna try this seeing how we have similar issues with my kindle fire being recognized with a reg usb and online in kfu but with a boot status of unknown and then not seeing it and status being offline when i plus in the factory cable. also with the regular cables it boots to the cm10 boot logo and then with the factory cable it stays at the kindlefire orange and white cable. only thing im confused on is where you say you
"I then unplugged my factory cable from both the PC and KF and booted the KF into recovery"
how did you reboot to recovery? or this was automatic after option 2? thanks and its awesome you were pretty much able to figure this out on your own. i feel i wont have the same luck
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you're getting the Kindle Fire orange and white, you haven't installed the new bootloader. Rerun KFU with the Kindle in Fastboot (using Cable) and select install FireFireFire. This will give you the bootloader to reboot to recovery.
Edit: You might as well reinstall TWRP while you're at it, just to be safe.

[Q] KF2 Empty and not recognized on windows

So I was trying to change my son's Fire 2 over to the new Kit Kat OS, and as I was downloading the necessary files to my computer, I thought I would wipe everything, since he had managed to pretty much fill it with junk, (he's 8). I have TWRP, (2.3.3.0) installed, and used that to wipe everything, including the internal storage and the format data wipe. I have done this with my Fire 1 with no issues, but this time I ran into a problem. TWRP works fine, but now windows won't recognize the tablet. When I go to mount the usb storage to copy the os files over, windows 7 cant load the device drives, and in my device manager it shows the Amazon Kindle fire 2 with the yellow exclamation mark next to it, saying that the drivers for this device are not installed. I have the SDK installed, and I have gone through and re installed the device drivers several times, and also uninstalled the kindle from the device list in manager. Nothing is working. I have attempted fastboot, but when I do try, it gets stuck at the "press the button menu" for TWRP, and after running the fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product command, it tells me it sees an Otter2-Prod-04.
Does anybody have any ideas or suggestions on how I can get into the usb storage so I can load the OS info? Thanks for any help.
Dead?
Well, I rebooted from TWRP and it just went black. No light when the cable is plugged in, (factory cable), no twenty second reset working, nothing. IS it safe to assume I now have a pretty paperweight, and I should be looking into getting my son another tablet?
xanthian23 said:
Well, I rebooted from TWRP and it just went black. No light when the cable is plugged in, (factory cable), no twenty second reset working, nothing. IS it safe to assume I now have a pretty paperweight, and I should be looking into getting my son another tablet?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Leave it on the charger overnight. Keep trying 20 second reboot. If you can get back into recovery you can adb sideload a rom into the device.
You've never been able to USB Mount this device from recovery.
Good luck. No reason it should be bricked....
How did you try to get into fast boot? You need a fastboot cable. This device is NOTHING LIKE the kf1.
Edit: also need to be sure exactly which kf2 you have.
--》Sent from my mind to your screen
mindmajick said:
Leave it on the charger overnight. Keep trying 20 second reboot. If you can get back into recovery you can adb sideload a rom into the device.
You've never been able to USB Mount this device from recovery.
Good luck. No reason it should be bricked....
How did you try to get into fast boot? You need a fastboot cable. This device is NOTHING LIKE the kf1.
Edit: also need to be sure exactly which kf2 you have.
--》Sent from my mind to your screen
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have the standard cheap Kf2, no HD, just the upgrade from the first from last year, (2012), they were selling around Christmas last year. I have tried getting it to start back up, but with no success. I don't even understand why it shut down like that. I hadn't done anything to it other than reboot, which I had done successfully several times before. As for the fastboot, I may be incorrect. I ran the adb command: fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product in CMD, and then plugged the kindle in and booted up. It showed it was an otter4 or something like that, which I thought meant it was in fastboot. At that time I was using my S4 usb cable. I'm sure I can sort out ho to sideload a rom via adb if I can ever get it started back up again. I had thought about opening it up and unplugging the battery and then re-plugging it back it to try to reset it, but I doubt it will help. Would getting a fastboot cable possibly make it start back up? If anyone has any suggestions on how I can get this thing started up again I would greatly appreciate it. I fell like crap for bricking my kids kindle, he's 8, so it's really important to him. It'll take me several months to save up to buy another one, so if I can get it running again, that would be awesome.
Here's a bit of an oddity, and maybe this spells some hope for me yet. So I plug the KF2 into the computer with the factory cable, hold down the power button for twenty seconds, let go, and then hit the power button again, for about a second, and windows makes the usb device plugged in sound, followed by a usb rejected or not recognized sound. It repeats this over and over for about thirty seconds or so and then stops. So there is something going on with the kindle, and its not flat out dead, or at least it seems. Is this a good sign? Does this help anyone to figure out what I might need to do?
So just to be sure that I was using a fastboot cable, even though I believe that my samsung s4 cable is fastboot capable, and I'm pretty sure I am using the factory cable, (it's not marked so I can't be 100% sure), I built my own fastboot cable, via instructions on how to do so on xda. (found HERE) It's doing the same thing with windows making the usb device inserted / recognized sound, followed by the usb device error sound. I'm guessing that this is a bad thing, am I correct?
One more bit of information to add to the list. I attempted to do the fastboot mode again,and decided to watch my device manager. Whenever windows chimes off that it detects a usb device, something called OMAP 4430 pops up for about a second before disappearing when the error sound comes on. I'm going to try and get a driver for that, just to see what happens. Maybe it'll help. I doubt it, but you never know until you try...
This just keeps getting weirder and weirder. So I installed the omap driver for windows and android, and now windows recognizes the device, but only for about a second. It just keeps cycling through the usb connected sound, recognizing the omap device, and then the usb disconnected sound, as though the device were being plugged in and then unplugged about every second for roughly thirty seconds. I'm starting to think there is something seriously wrong, which bites. If anyone has any suggestions, I'm all ears.
That's a hard brick' we can't use the usboot/aboot utility to fix the device like you can on other omap devices because we need a certain signed file to fix the boot loader. Only amazon has that file and they aren't giving it out. There is a way to recover your device from a hard brick but you need to be good with a soldering iron and have a USB sdcard reader, the kind that kinda is like a flashdrive rather than the multi type readers and some really small wire. Kurohyou wrote a tutorial on how to fix it in the kf2 dev section, not sure if he ever added the part in on how to reflash the boot loader from Linux, but if you take this route and try to fix it I wouldn't mind helping.
Sent from my Amazon Kindle Fire HD running CM10.1 Tablet UI using xda-developers app
stunts513 said:
That's a hard brick' we can't use the usboot/aboot utility to fix the device like you can on other omap devices because we need a certain signed file to fix the boot loader. Only amazon has that file and they aren't giving it out. There is a way to recover your device from a hard brick but you need to be good with a soldering iron and have a USB sdcard reader, the kind that kinda is like a flashdrive rather than the multi type readers and some really small wire. Kurohyou wrote a tutorial on how to fix it in the kf2 dev section, not sure if he ever added the part in on how to reflash the boot loader from Linux, but if you take this route and try to fix it I wouldn't mind helping.
Sent from my Amazon Kindle Fire HD running CM10.1 Tablet UI using xda-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
OK, I have both a tf - micro sd card usb card reader, and a full sd card usb card reader. I'll have to go digging for them in the morning, but I think I can find them. I'm also really good with a soldering iron, (used to be a vcr / tv repair technician), It took me roughly two minutes to do the homemade factory cable. So I am game, especially since at this point I really have nothing to loose by trying. Would you mind posting a link to where the tutorial is? I'm going to go looking for it, but just in case I can't find it, a link would help. And thank you so much for this suggestion!
OK, I found the tutorial on how to wire everything up and what's needed. I'll have to go get some small wire and a better tip for my iron, but aside form that, the wiring and soldering seems simple enough. My problem is going to be dealing with linux. I know Windows backwards and forwards, but I have a pretty limited knowledge of linux, aside from a few things we did in school to cover general PC repair. I can get it up an running, which I will do tomorrow, but I may need some help sorting out what to do with it once I have the board lined up and ready to roll, which will have to wait till next week when I get back from a work trip. Do you know if kurohyou offers repairs? If it's not too expensive, I would be willing to pay for the fix.
He might repair it, he just made a solderless repair tool to repair them. But like I said I'm more than willing to help with the Linux side, I'm a PC tech myself and use Linux primarily, you can basically burn an ubuntu live CD or put it on a USB stick and boot into the entire os without having to install it, from there's its as simple as plugging the device into the PC, and seeing what device path it assigned to the kindle's emmc, and running a dd command to flash the boot loader back onto the device.
Sent from my Amazon Kindle Fire HD running CM10.1 Tablet UI using xda-developers app
stunts513 said:
... you can basically burn an ubuntu live CD or put it on a USB stick and boot into the entire os without having to install it, from there's its as simple as plugging the device into the PC, and seeing what device path it assigned to the kindle's emmc, and running a dd command to flash the boot loader back onto the device.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah, I've ran a live usb version of unbuntu a few times, and in the past I have had the full version on my system, but I rarely ever used it, so I got rid of it. I have an extra 600 gig's of space just sitting around on my laptop, so I will install a full version, and get off my lazy rear and start learning linux. This should be a good first lesson. I can't do any of this until next week though, so I will be pm'ing you once I've gotten everythig hooked up and ready to go. Thanks again for the help.
I had a question about the repair though. I went through the discussion, and I may have just missed it, but did he ever figure out how to get the OS up and running? From what I could tell, he was still working on it, and hadn't managed to get a working rom loaded. I probably just either missed it, or didn't understand one of the post's.

[Q] Not your average brick...

This post is coming after hours upon hours and days upon days of research, trial, and no success. Hopefully someone can help me out...
I was asked to work on a "bricked Kindle" due to a reputaion among friends and co-workers of being the "go to" guy for rooting, custom ROMs, and the like. I am familiar with adb, fastboot, etc, and have used them often. Even though I didn't know what had happened to this particular Kindle, I was confident I could fix it.
I got it and began investigating. It powered on and FFF 1.4a popped up, followed by the stock Kindle logo where it stayed. I rebooted and used FFF to boot to Recovery, which is TWRP 2.6.3.1. Further checking found that there is no ROM installed, only FFF and TWRP, nothing else. I thought "This will be easy!". Wrong...
I connected it to my Windows 7 PC and ... nothing. Didn't even show as anything being connected at all. Installed drivers, still no luck. ADB doesn't see it either. Tried using 'mount' in TWRP, nope. Then began my trip down the numerous fixit programs KFU, FireKit, ReKindle, etc. Not a thing. Linux doesn't see it either. Like it is not even connected. Even tried the USB Shorting Trick, still wont register on anything, as anything. Bought a Fasboot "Factory" Cable, still nothing. My only hope at this point is the terminal in TWRP. I have successfully run various commands in there, verified the different boot modes with idme. Found that it did change to Fastboot (4002) and back to Normal (4000) when asked. Attempted to use Parted for some investigation but it is difficult to use in that terminal. I did discover that several partitions are screwed up. How to fix them is beyond my expertise. My thought at the moment is to wipe the thing 100%, partitions and all, to see if I can then connect at least with FK or something to reformat and put FFF and TWRP back on (latest versions). Also when looking through the logs in the terminal, it listed failures with an OMAP clock file.
The original owner told me he knew it couldn't be fixed and told me to keep it. I think it is still possible to salvage it. Any ideas?
Thanks.
kyle8b16 said:
This post is coming after hours upon hours and days upon days of research, trial, and no success. Hopefully someone can help me out...
I was asked to work on a "bricked Kindle" due to a reputaion among friends and co-workers of being the "go to" guy for rooting, custom ROMs, and the like. I am familiar with adb, fastboot, etc, and have used them often. Even though I didn't know what had happened to this particular Kindle, I was confident I could fix it.
I got it and began investigating. It powered on and FFF 1.4a popped up, followed by the stock Kindle logo where it stayed. I rebooted and used FFF to boot to Recovery, which is TWRP 2.6.3.1. Further checking found that there is no ROM installed, only FFF and TWRP, nothing else. I thought "This will be easy!". Wrong...
I connected it to my Windows 7 PC and ... nothing. Didn't even show as anything being connected at all. Installed drivers, still no luck. ADB doesn't see it either. Tried using 'mount' in TWRP, nope. Then began my trip down the numerous fixit programs KFU, FireKit, ReKindle, etc. Not a thing. Linux doesn't see it either. Like it is not even connected. Even tried the USB Shorting Trick, still wont register on anything, as anything. Bought a Fasboot "Factory" Cable, still nothing. My only hope at this point is the terminal in TWRP. I have successfully run various commands in there, verified the different boot modes with idme. Found that it did change to Fastboot (4002) and back to Normal (4000) when asked. Attempted to use Parted for some investigation but it is difficult to use in that terminal. I did discover that several partitions are screwed up. How to fix them is beyond my expertise. My thought at the moment is to wipe the thing 100%, partitions and all, to see if I can then connect at least with FK or something to reformat and put FFF and TWRP back on (latest versions). Also when looking through the logs in the terminal, it listed failures with an OMAP clock file.
The original owner told me he knew it couldn't be fixed and told me to keep it. I think it is still possible to salvage it. Any ideas?
Thanks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you want to re-do the partitions and install the very latest bootloader and TWRP +ROM, you should install otterX (1st gen only!!). Follow the steps in this link and you'll be fine.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2671619
kyle8b16 said:
This post is coming after hours upon hours and days upon days of research, trial, and no success. Hopefully someone can help me out...
I was asked to work on a "bricked Kindle" due to a reputaion among friends and co-workers of being the "go to" guy for rooting, custom ROMs, and the like. I am familiar with adb, fastboot, etc, and have used them often. Even though I didn't know what had happened to this particular Kindle, I was confident I could fix it.
I got it and began investigating. It powered on and FFF 1.4a popped up, followed by the stock Kindle logo where it stayed. I rebooted and used FFF to boot to Recovery, which is TWRP 2.6.3.1. Further checking found that there is no ROM installed, only FFF and TWRP, nothing else. I thought "This will be easy!". Wrong...
I connected it to my Windows 7 PC and ... nothing. Didn't even show as anything being connected at all. Installed drivers, still no luck. ADB doesn't see it either. Tried using 'mount' in TWRP, nope. Then began my trip down the numerous fixit programs KFU, FireKit, ReKindle, etc. Not a thing. Linux doesn't see it either. Like it is not even connected. Even tried the USB Shorting Trick, still wont register on anything, as anything. Bought a Fasboot "Factory" Cable, still nothing. My only hope at this point is the terminal in TWRP. I have successfully run various commands in there, verified the different boot modes with idme. Found that it did change to Fastboot (4002) and back to Normal (4000) when asked. Attempted to use Parted for some investigation but it is difficult to use in that terminal. I did discover that several partitions are screwed up. How to fix them is beyond my expertise. My thought at the moment is to wipe the thing 100%, partitions and all, to see if I can then connect at least with FK or something to reformat and put FFF and TWRP back on (latest versions). Also when looking through the logs in the terminal, it listed failures with an OMAP clock file.
The original owner told me he knew it couldn't be fixed and told me to keep it. I think it is still possible to salvage it. Any ideas?
Thanks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Even people think of me as a 'go to' guy. I love that respect
Sent from my A114 using XDA Free mobile app
Sounds like the USB port could be bad.
Sent from my PHOTON Q using XDA Premium 4 mobile app
Wish I could...
bflobills said:
If you want to re-do the partitions and install the very latest bootloader and TWRP +ROM, you should install otterX (1st gen only!!). Follow the steps in this link and you'll be fine.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2671619
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I would like to give that a try but the problem is that I cant push anything to the device w/ adb at the moment. No computer, Linux or Windows, will recognize it at all (not even incorrectly). I thought initially that the usb port on the Kindle was bad but I can get it to react differently when it is plugged in vs not. For example, when the fastboot cable is connected it stops at the FFF boot screen as if it is in fastboot, but nothing recognizes it and fastboot doesn't work. When I connect to the computer with a regular cable it will turn the Kindle on and charge it, but no connection. I am still leaning toward it being some kind of software problem on the Kindle.
Return2Stock Tool
kyle8b16 said:
I would like to give that a try but the problem is that I cant push anything to the device w/ adb at the moment. No computer, Linux or Windows, will recognize it at all (not even incorrectly). I thought initially that the usb port on the Kindle was bad but I can get it to react differently when it is plugged in vs not. For example, when the fastboot cable is connected it stops at the FFF boot screen as if it is in fastboot, but nothing recognizes it and fastboot doesn't work. When I connect to the computer with a regular cable it will turn the Kindle on and charge it, but no connection. I am still leaning toward it being some kind of software problem on the Kindle.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi, Noob here but I faced a similar situation to you just last week. The ONLY thing that helped me is a tool known as Return2Stock by N2A. Since I am new, I cannot post outside links but I made a post on reddit in the kindle fire "hot" section titled Bricked Kindle Fire With No Access to TWRP (it's on the first page about halfway down. It describes what I had to do in order to get it working. But it did work! And I tried EVERYTHING. Good luck

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