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About 3 weeks ago, I bricked my Kindle Fire. It was a "spare" that I had, so I started messing around with it. Got TWRP installed, downloaded a couple of ROMS, and attempted to install them. (fortunately, I made a backup of my base Amazon 6.2)
To make a long story short, the fire got stuck. I was able to adb and various other things on this forum to keep things going, but after a while, Kindle Fire Utility (adb, nothing) could see the device. I thought for sure I had an expensive paper weight.
Enter the factory cable. Because SkOrPn was in the middle of a move, my cable didn't get here right away. Then there were some issues with my PayPal address, which SkOrPn went out of his way to fix. Today, I got the cable at my office.
Looked at the cable. Thought I had been send an unmodified cable. Saw no evidence that anything had been done to the cable. An absolutely perfect professional job.
Couldn't wait to get home. Got home. Plugged cable in Fire, then in Laptop. Nothing. Now what? I thought it was supposed to boot the bootloader? adb didn't see the device. Drivers good, it sees my other Fire. I guess I was one of those 1% that hard brick the fire with no chance of getting it back.
Did a few searched on the forum. Found how to install TWRP on my device. I thought I had it already? Ran the commands. Nothing. Switched to regular cable. Nothing. I figured I was screwed. I unplugged the Fire. connected the factory cable. Ran the command. THEN hooked up the cable. JOY JOY JOY!! i GOT TWRP loaded!!!!
Restored my previously saved image, and now I have a working Kindle Fire. NOW i'm going to install some other ROM on it.
The moral is, never give up. Buy a factory cable!!! One of the things I've ever spent $15 or so on. And I recommend SkOrPn as your source. Quality work, great customer service!!!
Step-by-step
1) Make sure you have some charge left in your bricked Kindle. (one of my mistakes
2) Download "Kindle Fire Utility" or other utility that has the fastboot.exe command available.
3) Download twrp-blaze-2.0.0RC0.img (just google it)
4) Without connecting anything, run the command:
fastboot.exe -i 0x1949 boot twrp-blaze-2.0.0RC0.img
5) Connect the factory cable to your Kindle Fire
6) Connect the factory cable to you PC
7) Wait about 10 seconds.
8) DONE!!!!
Sorry for the long post. My wife doesn't understand why this would make me so excited. But you all would, I'm sure.
SteveM
a very nice post for people who have bricked their kindles and need a factory cable!
Thanks for the kind words Steve. I hope this cable gives you confidence in flashing your Kindle long into the future. Glad it worked out for you.
Oh, and you did not see any evidence of modification because I do not modify the cable, I just cut off the original micro connector and install my own, already modified of course with a resistor and all I have to do is re-solder the 4 wires back onto their original pins and then fill the entire casing with 400 degree SureBonder PDR Hot Glue (the worlds strongest known hot glue, according to them anyway lol)... That way it looks and feels like a true manufactured store bought cable. However, doing it my way is still in fact more work, but the end result clearly justifies it.
Anyway, again glad I could be of service to you and my fellow XDA friends.
Where do I run the command from?
The3rdEye said:
Where do I run the command from?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=23747804&postcount=3
smoen02 said:
About 3 weeks ago, I bricked my Kindle Fire. It was a "spare" that I had, so I started messing around with it. Got TWRP installed, downloaded a couple of ROMS, and attempted to install them. (fortunately, I made a backup of my base Amazon 6.2)
To make a long story short, the fire got stuck. I was able to adb and various other things on this forum to keep things going, but after a while, Kindle Fire Utility (adb, nothing) could see the device. I thought for sure I had an expensive paper weight.
Enter the factory cable. Because SkOrPn was in the middle of a move, my cable didn't get here right away. Then there were some issues with my PayPal address, which SkOrPn went out of his way to fix. Today, I got the cable at my office.
Looked at the cable. Thought I had been send an unmodified cable. Saw no evidence that anything had been done to the cable. An absolutely perfect professional job.
Couldn't wait to get home. Got home. Plugged cable in Fire, then in Laptop. Nothing. Now what? I thought it was supposed to boot the bootloader? adb didn't see the device. Drivers good, it sees my other Fire. I guess I was one of those 1% that hard brick the fire with no chance of getting it back.
Did a few searched on the forum. Found how to install TWRP on my device. I thought I had it already? Ran the commands. Nothing. Switched to regular cable. Nothing. I figured I was screwed. I unplugged the Fire. connected the factory cable. Ran the command. THEN hooked up the cable. JOY JOY JOY!! i GOT TWRP loaded!!!!
Restored my previously saved image, and now I have a working Kindle Fire. NOW i'm going to install some other ROM on it.
The moral is, never give up. Buy a factory cable!!! One of the things I've ever spent $15 or so on. And I recommend SkOrPn as your source. Quality work, great customer service!!!
Step-by-step
1) Make sure you have some charge left in your bricked Kindle. (one of my mistakes
2) Download "Kindle Fire Utility" or other utility that has the fastboot.exe command available.
3) Download twrp-blaze-2.0.0RC0.img (just google it)
4) Without connecting anything, run the command:
fastboot.exe -i 0x1949 boot twrp-blaze-2.0.0RC0.img
5) Connect the factory cable to your Kindle Fire
6) Connect the factory cable to you PC
7) Wait about 10 seconds.
8) DONE!!!!
Sorry for the long post. My wife doesn't understand why this would make me so excited. But you all would, I'm sure.
SteveM
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi there,
Where should I run that command from??
Here´s my case, I hope you could help me..
I need urgent help. Just got my kindle todasy and went through tutorial to use the rooting utitily. My kindle got stuck at loading screen and wouldn´t shut shutdown. I waited until the battery ran out. Waited for few more minutes and plugged in the data cable. The kindle now won´t stop blinking and does not get reckgonized by the pc. I did waited for the battery goes dead again, recharged then for about 30 min and nothing has changed. The loading screen keeps blinking and nothing seems to be happening. Please advise!!
andersonrel said:
Hi there,
Where should I run that command from??
Here´s my case, I hope you could help me..
I need urgent help. Just got my kindle todasy and went through tutorial to use the rooting utitily. My kindle got stuck at loading screen and wouldn´t shut shutdown. I waited until the battery ran out. Waited for few more minutes and plugged in the data cable. The kindle now won´t stop blinking and does not get reckgonized by the pc. I did waited for the battery goes dead again, recharged then for about 30 min and nothing has changed. The loading screen keeps blinking and nothing seems to be happening. Please advise!!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oh boy... I'm going to hope that it was a timing issue and our posts got crossed, because I answered your question for another user just above your post.
Regardless, the answer to that question isn't going to help you. You need this...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1621146
Never let your battery die like you did. You can always force a shutdown by keeping the power button pressed down for 20-30 seconds.
EDIT: I'd been meaning to post this guide for a while...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1623244
and I missed the part of your post about being "stuck at loading screen" the first time I read it. I suggest you read this guide...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1552547
make sure the device drivers are working (part 2) and learn some fastboot commands (part 3) so you can reset the bootmode on your device back to normal and reboot it.
kinfauns said:
Oh boy... I'm going to hope that it was a timing issue and our posts got crossed, because I answered your question for another user just above your post.
Regardless, the answer to that question isn't going to help you. You need this...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1621146
Never let your battery die like you did. You can always force a shutdown by keeping the power button pressed down for 20-30 seconds.
EDIT: I'd been meaning to post this guide for a while...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1623244
and I missed the part of your post about being "stuck at loading screen" the first time I read it. I suggest you read this guide...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1552547
make sure the device drivers are working (part 2) and learn some fastboot commands (part 3) so you can reset the bootmode on your device back to normal and reboot it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for your help. I tried to run a fastboot command and get msg: ´cannot run, adbwin.dll missing´... Now I´m really not sure what it´s missing anymore..
I´m going also leave it charging for longer and it seems to be a known issue, right?
My kindle continues not being reckognized and keeps on flashing the kindle Fire/Android Logo. When I unplug it it stops flashing and I won´t get any sigh of life, even after pressing the button for longer than 30s.
I managed to find the driver on device manager and uninstalled it, thinking that maybe it would help finding the device again, but it didn´t...
Recomendations please?
andersonrel said:
Thanks for your help. I tried to run a fastboot command and get msg: ´cannot run, adbwin.dll missing´... Now I´m really not sure what it´s missing anymore..
I´m going also leave it charging for longer and it seems to be a known issue, right?
My kindle continues not being reckognized and keeps on flashing the kindle Fire/Android Logo. When I unplug it it stops flashing and I won´t get any sigh of life, even after pressing the button for longer than 30s.
I managed to find the driver on device manager and uninstalled it, thinking that maybe it would help finding the device again, but it didn´t...
Recomendations please?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Unfortunately, if the device isn't booting up, it won't charge. Like the guide I posted above says, the device needs to load up a ramdisk before it will charge. If all you see is that KF/Android logo, then it's still in the bootloader and it's not charging your battery.
First, you'll have to get your drivers in order so you can send the device fastboot commands. I suggest you disconnect the KF from your computer and make sure it's turned off. Use the KFU driver install file and get it to install the drivers again onto your machine. I'm not sure if it will help, but it wouldn't hurt to reboot your computer after that. When it's back up and running again, open up the device manager. When you connect the KF back up to your computer, it should automatically power up again... look at what device comes up as it boots. The first thing you see (hopefully) is "Android Phone -> Android ADB Interface" appear. If you see that, you can be reasonably sure you can send it fastboot commands.
You'll have to issue the "fastboot oem idme bootmode 4000" on the command line. It will tell you that it's waiting for device... The next time it loops back around in its boot up process, it will send the command and hopefully get the bootmode back to normal. Then hook it up to your stock AC wall charger and if you are lucky it should continue to boot and charge your battery.
There's a lot of "hopefully" things that have to go right for this to work. You've got a few compounded issues that are giving you problems and all of them have to get fixed for the battery to start charging again.
andersonrel said:
Thanks for your help. I tried to run a fastboot command and get msg: ´cannot run, adbwin.dll missing´... Now I´m really not sure what it´s missing anymore..
I´m going also leave it charging for longer and it seems to be a known issue, right?
My kindle continues not being reckognized and keeps on flashing the kindle Fire/Android Logo. When I unplug it it stops flashing and I won´t get any sigh of life, even after pressing the button for longer than 30s.
I managed to find the driver on device manager and uninstalled it, thinking that maybe it would help finding the device again, but it didn´t...
Recomendations please?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
To fix the "cannot run, adbwin.dll missing", shift + right click on the folder containing adb.exe and select something like "Run as Command"
Sent from my Amazon Kindle Fire using xda premium
soupmagnet said:
To fix the "cannot run, adbwin.dll missing", shift + right click on the folder containing adb.exe and select something like "Run as Command"
Sent from my Amazon Kindle Fire using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I´m gonna try this and will post results. Thanks a lot.
kinfauns said:
Unfortunately, if the device isn't booting up, it won't charge. Like the guide I posted above says, the device needs to load up a ramdisk before it will charge. If all you see is that KF/Android logo, then it's still in the bootloader and it's not charging your battery.
First, you'll have to get your drivers in order so you can send the device fastboot commands. I suggest you disconnect the KF from your computer and make sure it's turned off. Use the KFU driver install file and get it to install the drivers again onto your machine. I'm not sure if it will help, but it wouldn't hurt to reboot your computer after that. When it's back up and running again, open up the device manager. When you connect the KF back up to your computer, it should automatically power up again... look at what device comes up as it boots. The first thing you see (hopefully) is "Android Phone -> Android ADB Interface" appear. If you see that, you can be reasonably sure you can send it fastboot commands.
You'll have to issue the "fastboot oem idme bootmode 4000" on the command line. It will tell you that it's waiting for device... The next time it loops back around in its boot up process, it will send the command and hopefully get the bootmode back to normal. Then hook it up to your stock AC wall charger and if you are lucky it should continue to boot and charge your battery.
There's a lot of "hopefully" things that have to go right for this to work. You've got a few compounded issues that are giving you problems and all of them have to get fixed for the battery to start charging again.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I tried to connect to a different pc. It does get recognized on device manager (as kindle) for few seconds and then it dissapears again...not sure what to do now in order to charge it...any suggestions?
Hey guys thanks for all the help so far, i bricked my kindle to the point of no shell after i tried to reflash the stock rom and was stuck in no mans land. So i ordered skorpn's factory cable (thanks again for sending it up north of the border) and when i plug it into the pc it loads the "kindle fire" screen ans stays there. It shows up in device manager but not when i look for it under adb devices and device won't be found in fastboot. Tried reinstalling the drivers and still no luck. Any ideas how i can get this thing back to the point of usability? Thanks for any help you have
andersonrel said:
I tried to connect to a different pc. It does get recognized on device manager (as kindle) for few seconds and then it dissapears again...not sure what to do now in order to charge it...any suggestions?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Fix your drivers. Read this:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=23747671
djsaxon said:
Hey guys thanks for all the help so far, i bricked my kindle to the point of no shell after i tried to reflash the stock rom and was stuck in no mans land. So i ordered skorpn's factory cable (thanks again for sending it up north of the border) and when i plug it into the pc it loads the "kindle fire" screen ans stays there. It shows up in device manager but not when i look for it under adb devices and device won't be found in fastboot. Tried reinstalling the drivers and still no luck. Any ideas how i can get this thing back to the point of usability? Thanks for any help you have
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
First, fix your drivers:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=23747671
Then:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=25400963
kinfauns said:
You'll have to issue the "fastboot oem idme bootmode 4000" on the command line. It will tell you that it's waiting for device... The next time it loops back around in its boot up process, it will send the command and hopefully get the bootmode back to normal. Then hook it up to your stock AC wall charger and if you are lucky it should continue to boot and charge your battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well I gave this a shot and it said: "finished. total time: 0.080s"
but it's still just flashing the android logo with kindle fire underneath.
maw230 said:
Well I gave this a shot and it said: "finished. total time: 0.080s"
but it's still just flashing the android logo with kindle fire underneath.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's because you have an entirely different problem.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=25400963
soupmagnet said:
That's because you have an entirely different problem.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=25400963
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you.
hey i can't doing that, when i type that code "fastboot..........img" cmd say <Waiting for devices> ?
jakelongryan said:
hey i can't doing that, when i type that code "fastboot..........img" cmd say <Waiting for devices> ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There are several reasons why you would get the typical "waiting for device" message, so...
...here is a step-by-step guide instruct you in getting it working properly, quickly and efficiently.
Step 1. Start a new thread in the Q&A section.
Step 2. Explain in GREAT detail exactly what your problem is.
Step 3. Explain in GREAT detail exactly how your problem started.
Step 4. Explain in GREAT detail exactly what you have done to remedy the situation on your own.
Step 5. Explain in GREAT detail exactly what the device does and everything you see from the moment you press the power button until the problem presents itself.
Step 6. Wait patiently until someone of appropriate knowledge is kind enough to lend a hand.
soupmagnet said:
There are several reasons why you would get the typical "waiting for device" message, so...
...here is a step-by-step guide instruct you in getting it working properly, quickly and efficiently.
Step 1. Start a new thread in the Q&A section.
Step 2. Explain in GREAT detail exactly what your problem is.
Step 3. Explain in GREAT detail exactly how your problem started.
Step 4. Explain in GREAT detail exactly what you have done to remedy the situation on your own.
Step 5. Explain in GREAT detail exactly what the device does and everything you see from the moment you press the power button until the problem presents itself.
Step 6. Wait patiently until someone of appropriate knowledge is kind enough to lend a hand.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
great advice and exactly what im gonna do. been searching for 2 weeks now reading and learning and still stuck so be looking out for my thread
After flashing firefirefire and twrp 2.1 to a friend's Kindle Fire, the kindle is totally unresponsive. (Yes, I believe I flashed the bootloader incorrectly. I probably flashed the actual .zip rather than a binary.)
Anyways, now:
- The power button never lights, no matter what I do. A/C plugged in, USB plugged in, after holding power button for minutes, after battery disconnected and USB connected, nothing.
- When plugged in to the USB port (Linux running), no messages appear in the syslog that indicate it even recognizes that a device has been connected
- usbboot (with the shorting trick) did not help
- disconnecting battery, then trying usbboot (with the shorting trick) does not help
For what it's worth: I actually accidentally performed the shorting trick on the wrong Kindle (mine) and effectively made it not boot. I WAS able to fix mine using the usbboot (with the shorting trick) and get it back booting. So, I know how this works. One difference I note, when I plugged in my Kindle, and tried the usbboot trick, it did not work (stuck on waiting for OMAP44xx device forever). But when I unplugged the battery, and plugged in the usb cable, at least Linux logged that the USB device was connected, and the power button flashed green, on and off. This other one does absolutely zero - nothing.
It's almost like the USB jack on this Fire is completely hosed. How could flashing the bootloader and recovery do this?
After extensive research, I'm beginning to feel like I'm out of options. The factory usb cable is the only thing I have not tried.
Thanks.
This is the thread I have been following to try to recover. It worked for mine, but not for my friends.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1636883
Update: if you want to know what i did:
sudo ./fastboot -i 0x1949 flash bootloader ~/Downloads/Kindle/u-boot-firefirefire-1.2.zip
(Yeah, I know, just wasn't thinking.)
Update:
I just, on whim, with the battery unplugged, tried the usbboot short trick again, and it worked!
I think I'm back in business.
Update:
After several successful attempts at communication with the device, I was able to get the bootloader overwritten and twrp installed. I had to customize the "usb_fix_parts_and_install_fff_twrp" script to get it to go through. It kept coming back to 'waiting for device'. Maybe I didn't wait long enough. It seemed stuck. Here is my customized script. (I removed the oem format and xloader).
#!/bin/bash
FKDIR=$(pwd)
echo "Loading FFF through USB..."
./usbboot $FKDIR/aboot.bin $FKDIR/u-boot.bin
#echo "Fixing partitions..."
#./fastboot oem format
#echo "Installing x-loader..."
#./fastboot flash xloader $FKDIR/mmcblk0p1
echo "Flash FFF..."
./fastboot flash bootloader $FKDIR/u-boot.bin
echo "Flash TWRP..."
./fastboot flash recovery $FKDIR/twrp2-blaze.img
echo "Resetting bootmode to standard boot..."
./fastboot oem idme bootmode 4000
echo "Loading TWRP..."
./fastboot boot $FKDIR/twrp2-blaze.img
Note: I was running this from my personal Linux (non VM linux system) as root. I just extracted firekit into my download dir and called the commands manually, since I didn't want to bother with a USB stick (since I run linux).
kcburge said:
After flashing firefirefire and twrp 2.1 to a friend's Kindle Fire, the kindle is totally unresponsive.
- The power button never lights
- When plugged in to the USB port (Linux running), not message appear in the syslog that it even recognizes that a device has been connected
- usbboot (with the shorting trick) did not help
- disconnecting battery, then trying usbboot (with the shorting trick) does not help
For what it's worth: I actually accidentally performed the shorting trick on the wrong Kindle (mine) and effectively made it not boot. I WAS able to fix mine using the usbboot (with the shorting trick) and get it back booting. So, I know how this works. One difference I note, when I plugged in my Kindle, and tried the usbboot trick, it did not work. But when I unplugged the batter, and plugged in the usb cable, at least Linux logged that the USB device was connected, and the power button flashed green, on and off. This other one does absolutely zero - nothing.
It's almost like the USB jack on this Fire is completely hosed. How could flashing the bootloader and recovery do this?
After extensive research, I'm beginning to feel like I'm out of options. The factory usb cable is the only thing I have not tried.
Thanks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Unfortunately a factory cable won't help, so save your money. This is caused by a bad bootloader flash. Usually from flashing a corrupt file or a .zip instead of a .bin
If you're using a VM, instead of straight Linux or LiveUSB, that could cause problems as well as the Linux version you are using. It's possible you were able to get yours to work with your current setup because the bootloader was still intact on your device.
Only you would know for sure but it's possible if the battery was low enough then it might have died while installing the bootloader, which would be the only reason you should get a factory cable.
Update:
After several successful attempts at communication with the device, I was able to get the bootloader overwritten and twrp installed. I had to customize the "usb_fix_parts_and_install_fff_twrp" script to get it to go through. It kept coming back to 'waiting for device'. Maybe I didn't wait long enough. It seemed stuck. Here is my customized script. (I removed the oem format and xloader).
#!/bin/bash
FKDIR=$(pwd)
echo "Loading FFF through USB..."
./usbboot $FKDIR/aboot.bin $FKDIR/u-boot.bin
#echo "Fixing partitions..."
#./fastboot oem format
#echo "Installing x-loader..."
#./fastboot flash xloader $FKDIR/mmcblk0p1
echo "Flash FFF..."
./fastboot flash bootloader $FKDIR/u-boot.bin
echo "Flash TWRP..."
./fastboot flash recovery $FKDIR/twrp2-blaze.img
echo "Resetting bootmode to standard boot..."
./fastboot oem idme bootmode 4000
echo "Loading TWRP..."
./fastboot boot $FKDIR/twrp2-blaze.img
Note: I was running this from my personal Linux (non VM linux system) as root. I just extracted firekit into my download dir and called the commands manually, since I didn't want to bother with a USB stick (since I run linux).[/QUOTE]
Nice good job
This is a rather extreme example of excessive quotation of a previous post, something that seems to be endemic to this site. I have seen few if any other web forums, blogs or whatever where people habitually quote fully a long comment that was posted previously, especially when it is likely to appear on the same web page. It's generally considered good practice to quote only the particular statements you are discussing, and to refer back to the post you are discussing by giving its author's id and/or the comment number.
And there is a Thanks button, after all!
aarons510 said:
This is a rather extreme example of excessive quotation of a previous post, something that seems to be endemic to this site. I have seen few if any other web forums, blogs or whatever where people habitually quote fully a long comment that was posted previously, especially when it is likely to appear on the same web page. It's generally considered good practice to quote only the particular statements you are discussing, and to refer back to the post you are discussing by giving its author's id and/or the comment number.
And there is a Thanks button, after all!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry, it won't happen again.
How to recover when a bad bootloader flash puts your Fire completely out
I had this same problem, and it came from flashing u-boot.zip instead of the u-boot.bin it contains.
Once flashed and rebooted, the Kindle Fire became completely unresponsive. No power/charge light, USB port appeared completely dead. I called Amazon support and they sent me a new Fire. But I just couldn't accept that it was unfixable, so I kept trying. And I figured it out.
Here's the procedure:
Disconnect the USB cable.
Remove the Fire's back cover.
Disconnect the battery. This step is critical! It ensures that the CPU is completely powered off.
Have your USB cable plugged into the computer, but NOT into the Kindle yet.
Ground the "USB boot" pad on the Fire's motherboard, as described elsewhere (the USB boot shorting trick). Keep it this way for the next step.
Plug the USB cable into the Fire. At this point, the Fire has been turned on in USB boot mode and is being powered exclusively by the USB port. You can now stop grounding the USB boot pad.
Now reconnect the battery. This step is critical!
Use usbboot as documented elsewhere to send a good bootloader via USB and boot with it. You should end up in fastboot mode. AND your power light should be back on, probably green! NOTE This only boots with the bootloader you sent, it does not flash it. The bad bootloader is still installed.
Now use fastboot to install a good bootloader, and a recovery if you want. Or use a firekit script...
Finally you can reboot for real. Make sure it will really reboot before you put the back cover on. You may have to change the bootmode back to 4000.
You now have a working Kindle Fire again.
Why it works. This is conjecture based on my findings:
First, as long as the battery is providing power to the Kindle, the CPU is not powered completely down, even in this case where the device seems totally dead from a bad bootloader flash. Therefore, grounding the USB boot pad does nothing, because the CPU only honors this on powerup. Disconnecting the battery and USB forces the CPU to power down. If you then ground the USB boot pad and connect the USB, the CPU powers up and goes into USB boot mode.
It's possible that if you wait a long time (maybe many days) so that the battery discharges to the point that the battery protection circuitry stops all further drain, you might get the same effect without disconnecting the battery. I didn't have the patience to test this.
Second, the bootloaders I used (two firefirefire versions) apparently check whether the battery is connected, and halt if it is not. I suspect this is true of most/all available bootloaders. So even if you get into USB boot mode and send over a good bootloader, once the Kindle starts booting with that bootloader, if it finds that the battery is not connected, it quits: it never gets into fastboot mode. Hence the "waiting for device" messages noted earlier in this thread. Therefore, as soon as you have gotten the CPU in USB boot mode, but BEFORE you've run the usbboot command, you need to reconnect the battery.
The only thing that remains is to listen to the angel choirs sing.
And wonder why you had to brick the replacement Kindle that Amazon sent--and break some of the tabs on its back cover in the process of fixing it--in order to fail at proving to yourself that you did not cause the problem in the first place. And decide whether you're glad that you now own TWO Kindle Fire's with loose back covers...
Great write up hope I never need to use it but lots of people get stuck in your situation so it should come in handy
That's basically what I did. The problems I had were:
1) not performing the short correctly
I used the wands (not sure what they are called) from an ohm meter (disconnected from the ohm meter) to make the contact with the rail. On one of the Kindles it was easier than the other. I must have tried 20 or 30 times on the one that I had the trouble with. After I had resigned that it was not going to work, I decided to try "one last time", and it worked. So, as someone else said. "Don't give up."
2) not performing the short with the battery unplugged.
I performed the whole operation of booting and overwriting the bad bootloader with the battery unplugged.
Thanks for you input.
switched off...need help
I have kf, its switched off and dont switched on, with the USBboot
Code:
./usbboot aboot.bin u-boot.bin; ./fastboot boot twrp-blaze-2.0.0RC0.img
kf switched on, but its loaded once to yellow triangle then switched off, then i turn on kf and no more yellow triangle.... all do in ubuntu, windows dont recognazes kf. and the firekit allows ones do one of his scripts, and that all. i stuck on firekit, whats i need flash on kf to do it works?
Hi. Thank you for your explanation, but I am having trouble understanding one part. Step 5: Ground the "USB boot" pad on the Fire's motherboard, as described elsewhere (the USB boot shorting trick). Keep it this way for the next step.
Is there somewhere I can see a picture of this or get detailed instructions? I don't want to do it incorrectly. I screwed my Fire 8.9 up after trying to root using the Bin4ry Tool and appropraite 8.9 drivers. Now I have an unresponsive Kindle Fire 8.9. It won't power on at all.
Thank you for any help.
Yeah ... I was looking for a bit more detail on that part.... I just super-bricked my Kindle Fire 7" and am hoping that this Shorting Trick works... but I also am confused at what a Boot Pad is
[email protected] said:
Hi. Thank you for your explanation, but I am having trouble understanding one part. Step 5: Ground the "USB boot" pad on the Fire's motherboard, as described elsewhere (the USB boot shorting trick). Keep it this way for the next step.
Is there somewhere I can see a picture of this or get detailed instructions? I don't want to do it incorrectly. I screwed my Fire 8.9 up after trying to root using the Bin4ry Tool and appropraite 8.9 drivers. Now I have an unresponsive Kindle Fire 8.9. It won't power on at all.
Thank you for any help.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Found this buried in the forums
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=19762674&postcount=51
Old thread, I know, but where can I find how to do the shorting trick
Nandr0idC0nsumer said:
Old thread, I know, but where can I find how to do the shorting trick
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
[INDEX] Kindle Fire Development
Sent from my KFFOWI using XDA Labs
sd_shadow said:
[INDEX] Kindle Fire Development
Sent from my KFFOWI using XDA Labs
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Maybe I'm being dumb but I can't find it :silly:
Nandr0idC0nsumer said:
Maybe I'm being dumb but I can't find it :silly:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
post #4 Unbricking
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=61563704&postcount=4
Sent from my XT1060 using XDA Labs
sd_shadow said:
post #4 Unbricking
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=61563704&postcount=4
Sent from my XT1060 using XDA Labs
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Alrighty I've gotten it recognized on my Linux PC as OMAP444x USB Device!
I haven't a clue what to do next. thanks in advance!
Alright so this morning my wife handed me her Kindle Fire and said "It's not working, fix it." Well that is all I got out of her, nothing of what was she doing when it went borked. All she said was yesterday she put it in her bag at the beginning of the day and at lunch time, when she tried to turn it on, nothing happened. Great, troubleshooting without a clear problem is just how I wanted to spend my day.
Device specifics.
+Kindle Fire first gen
+OtterX bootloader v2.05
+TWRP for OtterX 2.7.1.0
+OtterX partition files
+SlimROM v6.4
Windows 7 32bit enviroment
Well anyway first thing I did was plug it in to charge it. Once I plugged the device into a wall outlet the power light turned orange after a second or two but the screen never turned on. Not to the charging screen or the ROM unlock screen. Ok, no biggie, she let the battery run down and it just needs to charge.
After a few hours of charging the power light was green so I unplugged the device. Thinking the device was in the charging mode I held the power button, it turned orange then turned off but no bootloader screen or ROM splash screen. OK so that's odd. Did a hard reset and second time I tried to turn the device on sane thing, power light turned green for a few seconds and then turned off, again no OtterX bootloader or ROM splash screen. Ok, now there is a definite problem.
Plugged the device into the computer and Windows made the device connecting sound and I opened Windows Explorer. In the explorer window I saw the device connected as an OtterX, opened the tab>internal storage and all the files and folders displayed. Opened a command window from the folder I have my adb and fastboot and ran the adb devices command and it came back with the device ID>device. OK so maybe the screen is hosed. Still want to troubleshoot and attempt to re-flash the bootloader, TWRP and the ROM before I say the digitizer is hosed.
Typed adb reboot recovery and Windows made the device disconnecting sound and a few seconds later the device connecting sound. I typed adb devices and the same thing, the device ID>recovery. I was successfully able to push and pull a test file so I know adb commands are working just fine.
Here is where I'm running into a problem. I try to type the command adb reboot-bootloader and nothing happens in the command window, nor does Windows make the device disconnecting sound. I also try to hard reset the device, type the command fastboot devices, turning the device on at the <waiting on device> but it just boots into the ROM and OtterX appears in the Windows explorer window.
How do I put the device into fastboot node so I can re-flash the bootloader and recovery? Mind you as I already said at this point nothing appears on the screen so pressing the power button as normal is out of the question.
sabres032 said:
Alright so this morning my wife handed me her Kindle Fire and said "It's not working, fix it." Well that is all I got out of her, nothing of what was she doing when it went borked. All she said was yesterday she put it in her bag at the beginning of the day and at lunch time, when she tried to turn it on, nothing happened. Great, troubleshooting without a clear problem is just how I wanted to spend my day.
Device specifics.
+Kindle Fire first gen
+OtterX bootloader v2.05
+TWRP for OtterX 2.7.1.0
+OtterX partition files
+SlimROM v6.4
Windows 7 32bit enviroment
Well anyway first thing I did was plug it in to charge it. Once I plugged the device into a wall outlet the power light turned orange after a second or two but the screen never turned on. Not to the charging screen or the ROM unlock screen. Ok, no biggie, she let the battery run down and it just needs to charge.
After a few hours of charging the power light was green so I unplugged the device. Thinking the device was in the charging mode I held the power button, it turned orange then turned off but no bootloader screen or ROM splash screen. OK so that's odd. Did a hard reset and second time I tried to turn the device on sane thing, power light turned green for a few seconds and then turned off, again no OtterX bootloader or ROM splash screen. Ok, now there is a definite problem.
Plugged the device into the computer and Windows made the device connecting sound and I opened Windows Explorer. In the explorer window I saw the device connected as an OtterX, opened the tab>internal storage and all the files and folders displayed. Opened a command window from the folder I have my adb and fastboot and ran the adb devices command and it came back with the device ID>device. OK so maybe the screen is hosed. Still want to troubleshoot and attempt to re-flash the bootloader, TWRP and the ROM before I say the digitizer is hosed.
Typed adb reboot recovery and Windows made the device disconnecting sound and a few seconds later the device connecting sound. I typed adb devices and the same thing, the device ID>recovery. I was successfully able to push and pull a test file so I know adb commands are working just fine.
Here is where I'm running into a problem. I try to type the command adb reboot-bootloader and nothing happens in the command window, nor does Windows make the device disconnecting sound. I also try to hard reset the device, type the command fastboot devices, turning the device on at the <waiting on device> but it just boots into the ROM and OtterX appears in the Windows explorer window.
How do I put the device into fastboot node so I can re-flash the bootloader and recovery? Mind you as I already said at this point nothing appears on the screen so pressing the power button as normal is out of the question.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
with OtterX bootloader v2.05, every time kindle is booting, fastboot commands can be used, but the window is short.
with kindle off, enter command
Code:
fastboot devices
then power on kindle, if you get a response like 123456789 fastboot
then you could try flashing bootloader again, but likely LCD is bad
unzip OtterX bootloader v2.05.zip, copy otterx-u-boot_v2.05.bin from cache folder, paste to your adb folder
verify md5:241A3FD1EDAD0A0D95886DDEB4693E1C
Code:
fastboot flash bootloader otterx-u-boot_v2.05.bin
Code:
fastboot reboot
I'll give it another go. One thing I forgot to mention, when I rebooted the device to recovery I pressed the power button and the TWRP screen briefly displayed. Then the screen went blank again.
EDIT: I try the fastboot>devices command, power on the device and Windows comes up with device not recognized and the device booted into ROM. I have confirmed this is also happening with my Kindle Fire so looks like I'm missing a driver. Both devices connect successfully within the ROM and Recovery so is it just a bootloader driver issue????
Screen shot of the error and code number.
Windows 7 or 8?
Sent from my XT894 using Tapatalk
sd_shadow said:
Windows 7 or 8?
Sent from my XT894 using Tapatalk
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Click to collapse
Windows 7 32bit. I did a search of the forums and found a thread with a link for signed Kindle Fire drivers from Amazon. Downloaded, installed and rebooted system. Plugged in and powered up my Kindle Fire into SlimKat and Windows recognizes device and I'm able to transfer files no problems. I'll have to try the adb and fastboot commands later, I have to get my son to a college entrance exam soon. I'll let you know the results when I return home.
Had to step away for a few days because work but now I have five days off to diagnose this fastboot issue. Anyway installed the signed Amazon drivers and adb still works with no issues but still unable to get fastboot to work. Next steep I updated the the adb and fastboot files from the Android SDK tools and still same issue. Next step I put my phone into bootloader and was successfuly able to issue fastboot commands so I know fastboot is working. Now I know the problem is isolated to the Kindles and not my system.
sabres032 said:
Had to step away for a few days because work but now I have five days off to diagnose this fastboot issue. Anyway installed the signed Amazon drivers and adb still works with no issues but still unable to get fastboot to work. Next steep I updated the the adb and fastboot files from the Android SDK tools and still same issue. Next step I put my phone into bootloader and was successfuly able to issue fastboot commands so I know fastboot is working. Now I know the problem is isolated to the Kindles and not my system.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Use the drivers from the Kindle Fire Utility, the other drivers do not work with fastboot mode
sd_shadow said:
Use the drivers from the Kindle Fire Utility, the other drivers do not work with fastboot mode
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm on the OtterX partition, will the drivers still work or do I have to revert back to Amazon partition?
shouldn't need to revert, just use the install drivers.bat, then reboot pc
sd_shadow said:
shouldn't need to revert, just use the install drivers.bat, then reboot pc
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sweeeeet!!!!! Thank you. I've just been tasked with a project from the captain at my fire department so once again I have to put this on hold for a few hours. Once I'm done there I'll give it a go and report back.
I can not get my wife's fire HD 8.9 to boot. When I turn it on the Kindle Fire screen appears for about 5 seconds, then the Kindle Fire goes out, but the screen is still backlit.
This device is completely stock with no modifications. It did this when I turned it on one day, no previous problems.
I tried holding the power button down for up to 2 min. After I hold the button for 10 seconds the backlight goes out and the kindle is completely off. I tried letting the battery go completely dead, then charging it for several hours with no change. I tried running fastboot, but it is stuck at <waiting for device>. My computer does not see it at all. I do hear the chime that something was plugged into the computer immediately followed by the chime that it was disconnected, but nothing shows up in my computer at all.
Is there any hope for this Kindle, or is it bricked for good?
So I assume you're on windows. That beeb you hear is the fastboot mode you need to load drivers really quickly during that beeb. At that point fastboot shoukd work and you can issue a command to get into the factory restore.
I got it working again.
The problem was simple, I did not have any drivers installed on my computer for the kindle (I have never plugged it into this computer before it would not boot). I found the drivers to download here: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1890413
I was then able to get it into fastboot and recover it with instructions from this thread: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2011126
Ok so really need some help as I’m on the verge of giving up!! I don’t know anything about what you guys are doing!! My kindle fire 8.9 just decided to go ‘red screen’ on me when I turned it on one day. I hadn’t done anything to it to try to mod it or anything- it just turned on and went straight to the red screen and that’s all it’s done since. I’ve tried disconnecting the battery for a while and then reconnecting - no joy. I’ve followed tutorials here to try to reset it via fastboot but have got stuck where it says ‘waiting for device’ - I plug it in and turn it on but it doesn’t find it and nothing happens. I don’t know how to get it into fast boot mode any other way and don’t have any other ideas for things to try so any help would be really great or I’m just going to have to chuck it out?.
I got it into fastboot earlier without the special fastboot cable. I had lubutu running on a memory stick. I installed the adb and fastboot stuff. The first time it wouldn't say "waiting on device" or whatever but the second time before installing the adb and fastboot stuff I changed the settings so it was normal releases and unsupported sources or whatever so it'd draw from a bigger pool. Then the waiting on device part showed up. I plugged a normal cable in and was turning it on and off and all that. But what made it go into fastboot mode was having it plugged in then holding power button to turn it off then I pressed and held down the power button and I think it's the volume down button (the one closest to power) then it loaded into fastboot ^_^. I'm gonna try to actually fix it now.