Related
Please, please, really, help me out. My kindle fire is bricked, I tried Unbrick tool and a lot of other things, like installing again the drivers, the sdk, but nothing works at all!!
Here is the thing: When I was rooting my Kindle, my building got a blackout during the root process, and when the light goes on, my kindle was stucked on "Kindle Fire" logo. When I use adb devices, nothing shows. When I connect to Windows, it shows as a Unknown device, and when I try to install adb composite, it give a message saying that the driver android_winusb is not compatible with the hardware connected to USB. So, I can now really use this brand new Kindle Fire as a brick? I bought it on june 06 2012 !!!!!! Please, help me with this.. please..
Thank you very much
I was in the same place yesterday
Uninstall the unknown usb driver
Unplug kindle from usb
Reboot pc
Install drivers from kindle fire utility using the install_drivers bat
Plug kindle in, should recognize as adb device (if it shows up as a kindle uninstall those and reboot)
You may need to use kfu to get into normal bootmode if stuck in fastbook onc the drivers are set
Sent from my DROID BIONIC using XDA
Stuck in Kindle Fire logo mostly means your your KF is in fast boot mode. Try unplug your KF, get the latest KFU and reinstall drivers, reboot pc and reconnect KF.
Open KFU and select normal boot mode.
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD
Thank you for the answers, but it is still not working. I did everything you told me, but its not working. My Windows 7 set the device as unknown. When I set it to normal boot mode, the program starts to wait for the device that is already pluged in.
kindle fire bricked at all
What else can I do? I have tried on Mac, on Linux and Windows, but its not working in any of these systems.
zocas said:
What else can I do? I have tried on Mac, on Linux and Windows, but its not working in any of these systems.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
First figure out where it's getting stuck in the boot process. If the bootlogo appears on the display and stays that way without ever blacking out, then it's in fastboot mode.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1668159
If it does go black before showing the bootlogo again, then it's no longer in fastboot mode and its trying to boot into something. In this case, you'll have to hope that it's getting far enough into the boot process that it can accept adb commands from your computer.
Either way, you'll have to make sure the drivers are working properly.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1552547
The second one covers drivers, but the first 3 posts in general should be helpful to you. If it's not in fastboot mode and you can't get it to execute adb commands, you can either get a factory cable or open up the back cover on the device and use Firekit.
Hey Guys,
I successfully rooted my kindle fire 8.9" a while back and a few days ago decided to follow: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2277105 to install the twrp/custom rom.
In fireflash I moved the bootloader back to 8.1.4 and changed the boot and recovery partitions accordingly. I disabled the recovery auto update. I applied the changes and rebooted (I saw the red kindle fire letters and then it changed to the blue letters). It went into the TWRP screen at which point the guide told me to reboot. I found a "reboot to recovery" option and clicked it. Apparently, this was a very bad thing to do. The kindle boots to the Kindle Fire logo in red letters and stays there. it doesn't go blue and nothing moves. It stays that way until I turn it off.
It no longer will show up in Device Manager at all, but if I turn it on while plugged into the computer, the computer makes fast bump sounds like it sees the device for a second.The first time I plugged it into a different computer windows said it was trying to install a driver for "Jem-PVT-Prod-04" but then the driver installation failed and it doesn't show up in the device manager even with an exclamation mark.
Using different adb tools (Minimal adb and fastboot, kindle adb drivers, and android sdk) yields no response from the device even with a factory cable (which I purchased and arrived this morning). Fastboot just says < waiting for device > after the command "fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product"
Adb kill-server followed by adb devices leads to a blank list of devices. (I also went into user/.android/ to change the adb_usb.ini file to 0x1949 (which it already was)
I tried KFHD SRT v2.1 http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2011126 but it can't see the device either.
At this point, I don't know what can be done and am open to trying everything.
chickeninferno said:
Hey Guys,
I successfully rooted my kindle fire 8.9" a while back and a few days ago decided to follow: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2277105 to install the twrp/custom rom.
In fireflash I moved the bootloader back to 8.1.4 and changed the boot and recovery partitions accordingly. I disabled the recovery auto update. I applied the changes and rebooted (I saw the red kindle fire letters and then it changed to the blue letters). It went into the TWRP screen at which point the guide told me to reboot. I found a "reboot to recovery" option and clicked it. Apparently, this was a very bad thing to do. The kindle boots to the Kindle Fire logo in red letters and stays there. it doesn't go blue and nothing moves. It stays that way until I turn it off.
It no longer will show up in Device Manager at all, but if I turn it on while plugged into the computer, the computer makes fast bump sounds like it sees the device for a second.The first time I plugged it into a different computer windows said it was trying to install a driver for "Jem-PVT-Prod-04" but then the driver installation failed and it doesn't show up in the device manager even with an exclamation mark.
Using different adb tools (Minimal adb and fastboot, kindle adb drivers, and android sdk) yields no response from the device even with a factory cable (which I purchased and arrived this morning). Fastboot just says < waiting for device > after the command "fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product"
Adb kill-server followed by adb devices leads to a blank list of devices. (I also went into user/.android/ to change the adb_usb.ini file to 0x1949 (which it already was)
I tried KFHD SRT v2.1 http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2011126 but it can't see the device either.
At this point, I don't know what can be done and am open to trying everything.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just to confirm that you're doing it correctly...have you powered the device completely down, entered 'fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product', and then turned the device on? And still no luck?
BTW, the factory cable will not work with the KFHD8.9 and can possibly damage it. Don't use it.
soupmagnet said:
Just to confirm that you're doing it correctly...have you powered the device completely down, entered 'fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product', and then turned the device on? And still no luck?
BTW, the factory cable will not work with the KFHD8.9 and can possibly damage it. Don't use it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Correct, I tried fastboot with the kindle 8.9 off, on,off then on, and on then off. None of these does anything except sit and say < waiting for device >.
Thanks for the heads up on the factory cable. It didn't seem to do anything any different anyway but is unplugged now.
chickeninferno said:
Correct, I tried fastboot with the kindle 8.9 off, on,off then on, and on then off. None of these does anything except sit and say < waiting for device >.
Thanks for the heads up on the factory cable. It didn't seem to do anything any different anyway but is unplugged now.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've run into relatively the same problem with my HD8.9 several times while testing scripts but I've always been able to enable fastboot after rebooting using 'getvar product'. The difference in my case, is that I was always using Linux. You may want to set up a LiveUSB and install the SoupKit from the Dev section and try again to see if it makes a difference. SoupKit is not required, of course, but it is definitely recommended if you're not very familiar with Linux.
chickeninferno said:
Correct, I tried fastboot with the kindle 8.9 off, on,off then on, and on then off. None of these does anything except sit and say < waiting for device >.
Thanks for the heads up on the factory cable. It didn't seem to do anything any different anyway but is unplugged now.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Are you running windows??? If you are.... when your kindle is powered down and you type in the fast boot commands, go into device ,manager and see if your kindle shows a yellow triangle next to it. Reply asap.
Sent from my Amazon Kindle Fire HD using Tapatalk HD
Brandonrz said:
Are you running windows??? If you are.... when your kindle is powered down and you type in the fast boot commands, go into device ,manager and see if your kindle shows a yellow triangle next to it. Reply asap.
Sent from my Amazon Kindle Fire HD using Tapatalk HD
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Brandonrz,
It does not show up in the Device manager when off, when I send fastboot commands, or when on. It will however show up as Jem-PVT-Prod-04 for ~1 second if I have device manager open and I turn on the kindle (regardless of whether or not a fastboot command was sent).
@soupmagnet,
my flashdrive was dead so I just picked up a new one. Putting linux on it now.
chickeninferno said:
Brandonrz,
It does not show up in the Device manager when off, when I send fastboot commands, or when on. It will however show up as Jem-PVT-Prod-04 for ~1 second if I have device manager open and I turn on the kindle (regardless of whether or not a fastboot command was sent).
@soupmagnet,
my flashdrive was dead so I just picked up a new one. Putting linux on it now.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
For those who may be in same situation here is what I did.
Go to device manager. For that second, try to Right click on Jem-PVT-08 and choose update driver software, then browse my computer for driver software, then let me pick from a list of device drivers on my computer. I moved down list and picked Kindle and it installed as adb composite interface or something like that. Once installed the device manager showed "Kindle" and my fastboot was working. I've had the issue before. I hope this helped!
Glorious Success!
So I ended up doing a combination of the two solutions and since I know how frustrating this was here's how I did it just in case someone stumbles upon this.
How it magically worked:
1.) Inside of Linux Mint, I installed Soupkit
2.) In terminal i typed "fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product"
-----The kindle reacted for the first time in a long time and went into fasboot mode. Since I had no idea where to put the boot.img or recovery.img in linux to send them but the fastboot or adb commands, I decided to risk it and move to windows.
3.) I unplugged the kindle
4.) Booted into Win 7 x64
5.) The fastboot wasn't working in windows but I checked device manager and the exclamation mark was lingering. I manually picked the driver of amazon.com/kindle and it installed the adb composite device. Fastboot now works in windows.
5.) ran SR Tool.bat in the KFHD_SRT_2.1 folder and chose option 1 (Enable Fastboot)
-----Success
6.)in SR Tool i chose option 4 (erase cache and userdata)
----Took ~4 minutes but success
7.) in cmd I navigated to my sdk platform tools folder by typing "cd C:\Users\<username>\Desktop\SDK\adt-bundle-windows-x86_64-20130522\sdk\platform-tools"
8.) I downloaded the boot.img and recovery.img linked here (http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2011126) and placed them into C:\Users\<username>\Desktop\SDK\adt-bundle-windows-x86_64-20130522\sdk\platform-tools\
9.) in the cmd from step 7 I sent the following commands "fastboot -i 0x1949 flash boot boot.img" and "fastboot -i 0x1949 flash recovery recovery.img"
----Great Success
10.) In SR Tool I chose option 6 (reboot normally)
-----It looped for ~2 minutes but eventually booted like normal but the SR_Tool asked me to make sure that adb was enabled before clicking enter. I enabled it on the device but SR Tool still didn't seem to see that I had done it. Since it rebooted normally, I didn't really care.
11.) The kindle upgraded itself after I set it down to type this response to 8.4.3
I probably could have easily done this is linux, but I didn't know where to put the boot.img and recovery.img. Also, I'm guessing that the system.img is put back on the device when I used the KFHD SRT but I'm not sure.
Now I'm going for round two to get CM 10.1 put on this thing!
Thanks for all of the help. I really thought that I had actually managed to brick the nearly unbrickable kindle fire 8.9"
Congrats on your success and thanks for sharing the experience!
I think one problem with Windows is that, "fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product" does not work very well on putting the kindle to fastboot if the device driver is not properly installed, kindle will simply bypass the fastboot step and continue(and hang), the whole situation is a dead loop on Windows if the fastboot driver is having problem and the kindle can't boot into the ROM, and to make things even worse, there is no factory cable for HD8.9
So the SoupKit is a real life saver here.
I had the same sort of driver problem after I installed the second bootloader. For me the simple fix was to go into device manager (In Windows 7), uninstall whatever driver was there with the yellow triangle and then reinstall the official kindle adb driver. Congrats on getting it fixed though. It's a great feeling, I know.
Worked form me too!
Brandonrz said:
For those who may be in same situation here is what I did.
Go to device manager. For that second, try to Right click on Jem-PVT-08 and choose update driver software, then browse my computer for driver software, then let me pick from a list of device drivers on my computer. I moved down list and picked Kindle and it installed as adb composite interface or something like that. Once installed the device manager showed "Kindle" and my fastboot was working. I've had the issue before. I hope this helped!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks much for your pointer. In my case the Kindle showed up as an "Other devices" and I was able to use "browse my computer ..."->"let me pick from a list"->Kindle fire->ADB(ver 1.3).
You are awesome.
DBMmn said:
Thanks much for your pointer. In my case the Kindle showed up as an "Other devices" and I was able to use "browse my computer ..."->"let me pick from a list"->Kindle fire->ADB(ver 1.3).
You are awesome.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm so glad I could help, it was so frustrating for me.
Brandonrz said:
Are you running windows??? If you are.... when your kindle is powered down and you type in the fast boot commands, go into device ,manager and see if your kindle shows a yellow triangle next to it. Reply asap.
Sent from my Amazon Kindle Fire HD using Tapatalk HD
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Im stuck RIGHT here. manually entered fastboot, with the device showing as JEM-PVT-Prod 4. Unable to re-install recovery because <waiting on device>. Please help.
Tyler9097 said:
Im stuck RIGHT here. manually entered fastboot, with the device showing as JEM-PVT-Prod 4. Unable to re-install recovery because <waiting on device>. Please help.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Try kingo root or towel root. I believe they might be easier.
Sent from my Nexus 6P using Tapatalk
Brandonrz said:
Try kingo root or towel root. I believe they might be easier.
Sent from my Nexus 6P using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Turned out it was a driver compatibility issue with Windows 10. It doesn't recognize the Kindle HD 8.9 properly. Moved it over to a Windows 7 machine and it was working, up until i attempted to flash a new recovery and boot .img . Now it's stuck on the red Kindle logo and computer won't pick up the USB. Halp!
Tyler9097 said:
Turned out it was a driver compatibility issue with Windows 10. It doesn't recognize the Kindle HD 8.9 properly. Moved it over to a Windows 7 machine and it was working, up until i attempted to flash a new recovery and boot .img . Now it's stuck on the red Kindle logo and computer won't pick up the USB. Halp!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Power off the Kindle, type fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product , plug in the Kindle when you get <waiting for device>, and flash the 2nd bootloader, recovery, and freedom-boot images as directed in Hashcode's thread. Skip to step 5 after downloading the files, as we're already in fastboot mode at this point.
Also, Windows 10 enforces driver signatures, so you'll need to disable that before proceeding with the Kindle driver installation.
Sent from my Amazon Jem using XDA Labs
My son is trying to get his kindle fire back up and running. With not much success. He was reinstalling the software and must have wiped the device clean as now he cannot get back into recovery mode. When installing FFFF it says that there is no exec directory. He ordered a factory cable adapter from black hat under the impression that this would force the device into fastboot thus recovery. When he attached the adapter all that happened was that it went back to the kindle fire logo and is now showing offline status unknown. Before at least it was showing online. Are we mistaken that it should go to recovery (blue and white) kindle logo. We are a little tired of messing with it and are thinking of calling it quits. Any suggestions would be much appreciated. We have turned off and on, installed drivers, and switched cables to no avail.
jwhite0514 said:
My son is trying to get his kindle fire back up and running. With not much success. He was reinstalling the software and must have wiped the device clean as now he cannot get back into recovery mode. When installing FFFF it says that there is no exec directory. He ordered a factory cable adapter from black hat under the impression that this would force the device into fastboot thus recovery. When he attached the adapter all that happened was that it went back to the kindle fire logo and is now showing offline status unknown. Before at least it was showing online. Are we mistaken that it should go to recovery (blue and white) kindle logo. We are a little tired of messing with it and are thinking of calling it quits. Any suggestions would be much appreciated. We have turned off and on, installed drivers, and switched cables to no avail.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You almost got it right. The error you received means the shell is no longer accessible and therefore unable to send necessary shell commands, like those used to change bootmodes. In order to fix the problem, a factory cable is needed to access fastboot, which gives you an alternative method of changing bootmodes (to access recovery) or flashing partition images (i.e. installing recovery) by use of fastboot commands. But the factory cable does not actually boot the device into recovery on it's own though.
Here's where it get's a little tricky though. Unless you know what to look for, it's difficult to know whether the device is actually in fastboot because the only thing that will be displayed on the screen is the Kindle Fire logo. You'll know if the device is in fastboot because the Kindle Fire logo will stay brightly lit, indefinitely. If the Kindle Fire logo flashes and/or gets slightly dimmed, then you'll know the factory cable you have is defective. With that being said, however, just because the device boots into fastboot mode, doesn't necessarily mean the computer will communicate with it. For that, you need working drivers.
Long story, short...you need to confirm whether the device is actually in fastboot before you can go any further.
Thanks for the reply. I looked at the logo this morning and it came up brightly lit with no change so I am assuming it is in fastboot mode. That being said the device, in device manager it comes up as unknown usb device. Before it would come up as kindle and I would install the drivers and it would come up as an android phone adb composite. I went into device manager and tried to update the driver manually and windows tells me that the correct driver is being used for this device. I did unplug the adapter and go back with a regular data cable and that made no difference. Do you need to force it to use a different driver. I am trying to use the drivers that came with the KFU I downloaded.
soupmagnet said:
You almost got it right. The error you received means the shell is no longer accessible and therefore unable to send necessary shell commands, like those used to change bootmodes. In order to fix the problem, a factory cable is needed to access fastboot, which gives you an alternative method of changing bootmodes (to access recovery) or flashing partition images (i.e. installing recovery) by use of fastboot commands. But the factory cable does not actually boot the device into recovery on it's own though.
Here's where it get's a little tricky though. Unless you know what to look for, it's difficult to know whether the device is actually in fastboot because the only thing that will be displayed on the screen is the Kindle Fire logo. You'll know if the device is in fastboot because the Kindle Fire logo will stay brightly lit, indefinitely. If the Kindle Fire logo flashes and/or gets slightly dimmed, then you'll know the factory cable you have is defective. With that being said, however, just because the device boots into fastboot mode, doesn't necessarily mean the computer will communicate with it. For that, you need working drivers.
Long story, short...you need to confirm whether the device is actually in fastboot before you can go any further.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Kindle drivers are notoriously touchy. Try uninstalling/reinstalling them a couple of times. I predict they will suddenly start working and you can proceed with installing custom recovery/rom.
Sent from my GT-p511x
Thanks for the respone, I have installed and uninstalled to where if I here the computer connect and disconnect one more time I might throw it against the wall. Are there specific steps that I need to take other than ordinary to unintall/install the drivers correctly or maybe drivers that are more sccuessful than others.
Ok, after sifting through a number of threads. I read where adb and fastboot are mutually exclusive and adb will not see a device that is in fastboot mode. Is that correct? And when you install the drivers with KFU does that contain the fastboot drivers? Or should you download SDK platforms tools which contains both? And then run fastboot commands to flash a recovery? If so, is there a good tutorial for someone that does not follow directions well?
jwhite0514 said:
Ok, after sifting through a number of threads. I read where adb and fastboot are mutually exclusive and adb will not see a device that is in fastboot mode. Is that correct? And when you install the drivers with KFU does that contain the fastboot drivers? Or should you download SDK platforms tools which contains both? And then run fastboot commands to flash a recovery? If so, is there a good tutorial for someone that does not follow directions well?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, adb and fastboot are mutually exclusive but the same drivers should work for each. You can try the drivers located HERE, or read the topic on understanding driver installation located HERE.
Of you are still unsuccessful in communicating with the device in fastboot while using fastboot commands, you may have to restore it with Firekit using the "shorting trick".
OK, here is an update. I was able to get the device into recovery and TWRP. Not sure what I did differently other than maybe standing on one foot, facing south and staring at the stars, but it worked. When all of this started it was right after my son updated the software to 6.3.2 via wifi, maybe something went wrong. So last night I was able to flash 6.3.1 back to the device and was told that it was done succesfully. Using adb I can see the device in recovery and the shell lsiting is ~ # ←[6n which I guess is good as it said there was no shell before. So now my question is could it possibly be a corrupt bootloader on the device as well as it was hung at the fire logo. If so, do I need to reinstall the stock bootloader and if so where do you find it or does it come with the software flash?
I have succesfully got the update file on the kindle, did all the wipes selected install and now seems to be hung at veryfing filesystem and partitions sizes. Can someone tell me how long a flash should take or is something wrong? Since I have never done this before I have no idea.
I have searched and read a bunch and have not stumbled upon my situation.
Hopefully someone can shed some light on my use of a factory cable.
Bought a cable from SkOrPn - great guy and very helpful. We thought maybe the problem was the cable so he sent out another. TO BE CLEAR, ISSUE IS NOT WITH SkOrPn's CABLE. Both cables yield the same results.
So, here's the deal:
I have 2 KFs that where bone stock. I used KFU to root, install TWRP and FFF 1.5 Bootloader. All worked fine and I subsequently installed CM11. So all is good.
Now when I try to use the Factory Cable as instructed
Factory cable - Using a factory cable is the most straightforward method of enabling fastboot mode on the Kindle Fire and it will work with any bootloader. With the device off, plug the cable into the Kindle Fire, then the computer and the device will boot up directly into fastboot mode. No other user intervention is required.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
But when I plug the Fcable into the fire it immediately powers on and boots normally, skipping fastboot mode. This happens with or without plugging the other end into the PC.
So SkOrPn suggested I try plugging into the PC 1st and then the fire. This does boot to fastboot mode. So now I unplug the Fcable and using a "normal" cable plug the fire back into my PC. Now I get an error message saying that the USB device cannot be installed and of course KFU/ADB/fastboot does not recognize my device. So I am (or appear to be) in fastboot mode, but can't communicate with my fire. Keep in mind I have KFU working, so I know drivers are installed.
Any thoughts?
And the above is the same for BOTH fires.
Luckly I am fully rooted with FFF 1.5 and CM11, so I really dont need to use the factory cable. But I would like to figure this out BEFORE I need it!
micl9 said:
...So SkOrPn suggested I try plugging into the PC 1st and then the fire. This does boot to fastboot mode. So now I unplug the Fcable and using a "normal" cable plug the fire back into my PC. Now I get an error message saying that the USB device cannot be installed and of course KFU/ADB/fastboot does not recognize my device. So I am (or appear to be) in fastboot mode, but can't communicate with my fire. Keep in mind I have KFU working, so I know drivers are installed.
Any thoughts?
And the above is the same for BOTH fires...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just because you can run kfu, and you got your kindles rooted, that doesn't necessarily mean your drivers are installed properly.
I would uninstall and reinstall your drivers just to check.
Also, when you plug in your kindle in fastboot mode, does you're computer list it as a fastboot device? (Command Prompt, cd to folder with KFU tools are and adb.exe and fastboot.exe are, then type fastboot devices; a string of characters is good, while nothing is bad)
If that doesn't work, can you use kfu to reboot your kindles into fastboot?
Sent from my Nexus 7 using Tapatalk
I tried uninstalling and re-installing drivers - might try a fresh computer
When connected in fastboot mode devices command comes back with nothing.
I will try using KFU to put the kindle into fastboot when I get home tonight.
Update:
OK so KFU can put it into fastboot - witch matches behavior using cable, so now I know that works.
And my PC does not recognize the kindle in fastboot mode. Tried UN-installing and re-installing drivers with no luck. As this has been my "hackers" laptop for quite a while there is no telling what driver ghosts remain.
Will give it a shot on another PC.
Still kinda odd that my Kindles require a different factory cable procedure to get into fastboot mode.
Post once you try it on a fresh PC.
Sent from my Nexus 7 using Tapatalk
Ok most issues are resolved
KFU
Apparently while in fastboot mode KFU will report status unknown, but using bootmode menu to change back to Normal works.
Also using adb devices in fastboot mode returns nothing, using fastboot getvar product returns kindle!
For these 2 I should have read more - sorry
USB reporting device cannot be installed after having device in fastboot mode via factory cable.
OK this one I got some bad info that said the factory cable is not used for flashing - only for getting device into fastboot mode.
What I was doing wrong - using Fcable to get into fastboot and then swapping the Fcable out for a std USB cable - this results in the device cannot be installed error and kindle not being seen by fastboot commands.
What I should do - using Fcable to get into fastboot mode AND using it for the data communication as well (ie DONT unplug the Fcable!).
Last (and still open) issue
Why my devices don't use the normal factory cable process (plug into Kindle and then PC) - but only works by plugging PC end 1st and then Kindle.
but I am not sure this matters anymore.
jma9454 thanks for chiming in!
Hi, I just recently got a Kindle Fire HD 8.9 and decided that I wanted to flash CM 11 onto it. Well I followed the steps of a tutorial up until the point where I have to flash a second bootloader and TWRP Recovery. I flashed and installed the script, but accidentally clicked the option to turn off and go into recovery mode or something. Now my Kindle is stuck in a boot loop where the Fire in kindle fire is red. The logo stays for a couple seconds then the kindle just restarts itself.
I've tried to go into fastboot mode using the command prompt "fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product" but when I connect my device, the computer does not see a thing. I do not know what else I can do at this point. I've looked up and read countless forums, but nothing has worked. Is there any way for me to recover my Kindle?
If it hasn't ever been in fastboot mode before while hooked up tot hat PC and had the drivers installed then it is precisely that reason the command is not working, because the drivers ade not installed. You can try to install them if that is the case, you just have to be fast and update the driver while the device is first plugged in and showing up for a brief moment. I personally recommend using a ubuntu 13.10 CD for this kinda case because of how Linux's driver system works you Don,t have to do anything, the driver already loads up when you plug it in.
Sent from my Amazon Kindle Fire HD using Tapatalk