Help collecting phone components i.e. ROM, bootloader, modem, kernel....? - Sprint Galaxy Note 4 Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

Lemme start off by saying I've got a SM-N910P that's getting the fabled eMMC_write failed error.
Because of its intermittent behavior, it REALLY seems possible it's due to a corrupt file or sector of memory somewhere. Can't say for sure but I'd love to try everything I can, which leads us to...
I know of these portions of software that can be flashed(?) onto a phone:
ROM
modem
kernel
bootloader
EFS?
Pit (re-partition)
Am I missing anything at all? And most importantly... I know (think) these items, if flashed, have to match up to each other. Like, bootloaders matching roms matching kernels, etc... the hard part is figuring out what matches what in an attempt to flash and reformat and wipe as much as possible. It seems to vary what a ROM comes with- some with, some without bootloaders or kernels.... I dunno how to tell for sure??
Anyone got any insight on how to collect and complete these things? Pick any rom, doesn't matter... it's on PK1 at the moment, but had taken the official PL1 update before i flashed PK1 back onto it. It will boot sometimes, but always eventually crashes. If it has to be rolled back to LP, it is what it is lol.
I'm aware of wake-lock bandaid, and other odd suggestions that do not fix this issue. Cleaning house as much as possible just might work- and if it does, someone could be a hero. There's HUNDREDS of devices suffering out there after MM came out.

I may have chosen a bad title LOL. If anyone reads this.... A huge help would be just to know for certain all the components and what they're called that I can completely wipe and replace. If it helps, I have 3 more of these phones exactly same model and carrier that are active use phones at my disposal (sorta...my wife, my brother....lol).
If I understand correctly, there's an EFS ...partition?...that I must preserve? Kinda like the phone's identity, but complicated. If I could back that up, how much closer could I get to a full, complete, 100% wipe of the phone's internal memory? If ya see where I'm going with this....I believe there's data stuck somewhere that's corrupt and causing this eMMC issue. Lemme know if I'm just completely ignorant and wrong tho lol.
Thx for looking, anyone.

There's lots of theories of what's happening, that's true. But I think evidence points directly to the eMMC.
You can find how to videos on YouTube for replacing eMMC chip on main board or just main board replacement. There are many places on Amazon and eBay to buy main board replacement for Note 4.
I asked my local uBreakItiFixIt for an estimate on main board replacement. They don't stock eMMC or main board but gave me a $10 labor quote for board replacement that I would bring in myself.
There was a poster that was trying to localize the issue through a developer online. Sent his phone to him to flash the recovery, claiming the partition was corrupt but he got his phone back with same issue. I do believe many happy ending threads in our forum are incomplete.
There was a thread in another site that had numerous phones exhibiting eMMC failure that were Odin flashed with PIT loaded, repartition with PIT, nand erase all and stock tar loaded all at once and I don't think there was a happy ending anywhere to be found where reports after flash were followed up.
That suggests it's not corruption but component failure. And also suggests this shouldn't be happening with normal flash or update. I think the update places a burden on weak components is where the correlation to update is coming from.
From my own experience, only few issues have happened that a reboot wouldn't fix. Twice over the entire life of my phone- picked up on launch day as a pre-order and kept in continual service since-, I've had to Odin TWRP because the phone wouldn't boot into recovery from system boot, when commanded.
The times I've flashed ROM again or wiped cache and dalvik-cache and rebooted were mostly my doing that caused unexpected results. I also crashed marshmallow twice early on while modifying stock and wasn't sure how I did that but all in all, I think I'm to blame for mistakes rather than the phone or OS updates. My phone has remained healthy but I've also replaced the battery frequently.
How's your battery? If you can Odin stock tar successfully, I'd try it again but only with a fresh battery. I'm suspicious of replacement battery's shelf life if ordering a replacement battery has it arriving with very low capacity. Research has shown batteries last longer for users when they're stored at 50% capacity and maintained at that capacity. But they're low drain batteries but imagine they could have made in bulk when Note 4 was first manufactured. If left to drain and not maintained, you may not get a year's worth of normal use from that battery. The original battery received new with these phones were notably failing at 12 months. Also depends on use. Others may fail sooner; they're rated at 500 full charge and discharge cycles. Depending on use, they may not last as long as rated or get the cycles used up prior to a year. They can become erratic and unstable at that point, whenever that is.
Nonetheless, if you want to try procedure I described earlier, a post is linked below for reference. Consider also that the more you flash a failed or intermittent eMMC, you're more likely to induce its demise to permanent or persistent failure; unusable.
https://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=70181377
As far as EFS partition, I wouldn't try to restore a backup if replacing eMMC or main board. Phone should activate easily if you're a Sprint subscriber. Just Odin stock tar.
Sent from my SM-N920P using Tapatalk

Related

[Q] Seeking a way to make a CDMA GNex a dependable phone?

Simply stated, I am seeking a way to make this device a dependable phone, as I am stuck with it at the time being. I loved my original GNex, but what Verizon keeps sending me is garbage.
I have had quite a strand of bad luck with this device. I am averaging a warranty phone about once every six weeks. I have actually tried talking to Verizon about exchanging the phone for one of equal or comparable value, and they won't do anything. I am convinced that these certified like new devices are junk.
Issues that keep causing me to warranty the phone are:
- Charging Issues
The phone quits accepting a charge. I have replaced the battery.
- Phone Locking Up
Recently, while using apps, the phone has developed a habit of where it locks up, and the quits accepting input. It's like it goes to sleep, but it doesn't wake up. The only way to get it to function is to remove and reinsert the battery.
- Phone turning off on its own
Self Explanatory
- Radio Failure within the device
I'm not against rooting the device, I have kept them stock, and wouldn't know what to get, I just want to do something that will make this a dependable device and possibly solve any problems I may be having. They seem to be reoccurring problems with each handset they send me Any tips would be greatly appreciated as I have another one due to arrive tomorrow!
I don't think these refurbished headsets go through much, if any, testing before they are re-issued. What I would suggest is to begin with flashing a factory android image via the boot loader. There are plenty of guides to doing this. This step will ensure that any problems that you may be experiencing are not software related. A stock image reflag should do the job for the most part, but if you find yourself looking for more you can flash an alternate ROM, these won't solve any issues that you may still experience in a stock ROM however.

[Q] Sudden Death Syndrome on ATT GS3 i747?

The best part about spending 30 minutes typing a post is having your browser crash. Anyway, if you have any further questions because this is going to be a bit brief, let me know.
My background: Fairly well-versed in Android, custom ROMs, flashing, rooting, doing development work on Android, reading directions, decent google-fu and RTFMing. But I really need help on this one. The phone in question is my primary phone, which I actually like to keep as stock because I don't want anything mucking up on it. It's 20 months old (daily usage), running stock 4.1.1, which was rooted about 17 months ago with cf autoroot, which I needed for development purposes. For the past 10 months, I have been using an extended aftermarket battery, because when traveling and thusly using navigation, gtranslate, lots of messaging, and whatnot with a bright screen whilst outdoors, I was tired of having my phone leave me without a communications device at 8pm.
Recent changes to phone: Several weeks ago, before another bout of traveling, I did my usual *#197328640# perso256 disable (one of the reasons that I like keeping my phone at 4.1.1), and voila -- carrier unlock.
What happened: Things were going swimmingly for a few weeks, when one day, I was out and about, typing something into google translate, and the screen just went black. It was early midday, and the phone was at 90% battery (extended battery life ftmfw). Every now and then, when doing serious multitasking (and, mind you, since the early days of owning this phone, as well as through the entire life of my GS1, which still works, by the way), my GS3 would occasionally reboot of its own accord. I thought nothing of this, except it just being a hallmark of samsung phones, and a minor inconvenience, at worst. This time, however, it failed to power back on. I removed the battery, held in power button in an attempt to discharge any residual power, and put the battery back in. Nothing. Panic. No ssung logo, no vibration, no lights, nothing. Just the black screen staring back at me. There was no moisture, and no trauma to the phone... nothing, save for a ridiculous sinking sensation.
Symptoms: Phone completely unresponsive. I tried a charged stock GS3 battery, and the symptoms are the same. If I plug the phone in without a battery, the led lights up red for a time, and that's it. Even though I haven't modded this phone at all, with the exception of the rooting almost 2 years ago, I tried everything I could think of and read online. vol up + power + home. vol down + power + home. Leaving the battery out for a while. So much reading through these forums and some others online. When I plug it in in windows (even though I primarily use linux), I get the QHSUSB_DLOAD problem, so I do not think it is a problem with the power button? Or maybe the power button can be permanently depressed or something that would cause this? Anyway, I've installed QHSUSB_DLOAD windows drivers, but don't want to start flashing things until I know there isn't another longshot option to get this to work. I even loaded up linux and ran pblclear, which allegedly attempts to knock HTC phones out of being stuck in QHSUSB_DLOAD mode. Didn't work, but figured it was worth a shot, and seemed relatively harmless.
Why I don't even know if it's SDS: The reason I'm asking this is because I'm completely at a loss. SDS appears to affect i9000s after 150-200 days, OR when people incorrectly flash a ROM, or something happens during flashing or modification. My phone is an ATT i747 has been fully operative for 600+ days, and I haven't done any flashing, rooting, whathaveyou in nearly two years (and it was just that simple autoroot that I ran once).
What I'm wondering: I really want to get this phone working, because of hundreds of images, notes, data, etc. that I have accrued over the past few years. Most of my videos and larger files were on my sd card, but literally hundreds of memories and works in progress that I would do insane things for were saved to the phone. I'm an idiot for not backing it up, but I wasn't doing anything to the phone, so wasn't expecting such a catastrophe. Will JTAG work? What about a debricking microsd image? Most of the ones I can find are for 4.1.2 or 4.1.3 -- are there any for 4.1.1? I'm nearly certain 4.1.1 is my version, because IICR 4.1.2 and 4.1.3 don't even have the perso256 disable menu, and it's why I had not upgraded to them. It seems like the microsd rewrites would wipe the contents, and then I would have to quickly attempt a recovery on the data? Or have there been any cases with similar failures that are something else dying on the board? To be perfectly honest, if it appears to be an issue with the board, it's not beyond my ability to perform BGA rework and remove the emmc entirely, and transplant it onto a new board, but I would ///really/// like to avoid that.
Thanks for reading... :angel:
Edit:
Additional information: I forgot to mention that I have found pages such as this samsung-galaxy-s3-sgh-i747-i747m-repair-dead-boot-1755452 [I'm afraid you'll have to google it because I can't post links if you want to look TT^TT] which have files that say, for example, "Samsung SGH-I747 Repair Boot Supported" if using JTAG. So, if there aren't suggestions about how I can fix my phone with an sdcard unbrick, or something else, does anyone know whether or not doing a boot repair will unbrick a phone without wiping the ROM itself? Thanks again~~
Top5a said:
The best part about spending 30 minutes typing a post is having your browser crash. Anyway, if you have any further questions because this is going to be a bit brief, let me know.
My background: Fairly well-versed in Android, custom ROMs, flashing, rooting, doing development work on Android, reading directions, decent google-fu and RTFMing. But I really need help on this one. The phone in question is my primary phone, which I actually like to keep as stock because I don't want anything mucking up on it. It's 20 months old (daily usage), running stock 4.1.1, which was rooted about 17 months ago with cf autoroot, which I needed for development purposes. For the past 10 months, I have been using an extended aftermarket battery, because when traveling and thusly using navigation, gtranslate, lots of messaging, and whatnot with a bright screen whilst outdoors, I was tired of having my phone leave me without a communications device at 8pm.
Recent changes to phone: Several weeks ago, before another bout of traveling, I did my usual *#197328640# perso256 disable (one of the reasons that I like keeping my phone at 4.1.1), and voila -- carrier unlock.
What happened: Things were going swimmingly for a few weeks, when one day, I was out and about, typing something into google translate, and the screen just went black. It was early midday, and the phone was at 90% battery (extended battery life ftmfw). Every now and then, when doing serious multitasking (and, mind you, since the early days of owning this phone, as well as through the entire life of my GS1, which still works, by the way), my GS3 would occasionally reboot of its own accord. I thought nothing of this, except it just being a hallmark of samsung phones, and a minor inconvenience, at worst. This time, however, it failed to power back on. I removed the battery, held in power button in an attempt to discharge any residual power, and put the battery back in. Nothing. Panic. No ssung logo, no vibration, no lights, nothing. Just the black screen staring back at me. There was no moisture, and no trauma to the phone... nothing, save for a ridiculous sinking sensation.
Symptoms: Phone completely unresponsive. I tried a charged stock GS3 battery, and the symptoms are the same. If I plug the phone in without a battery, the led lights up red for a time, and that's it. Even though I haven't modded this phone at all, with the exception of the rooting almost 2 years ago, I tried everything I could think of and read online. vol up + power + home. vol down + power + home. Leaving the battery out for a while. So much reading through these forums and some others online. When I plug it in in windows (even though I primarily use linux), I get the QHSUSB_DLOAD problem, so I do not think it is a problem with the power button? Or maybe the power button can be permanently depressed or something that would cause this? Anyway, I've installed QHSUSB_DLOAD windows drivers, but don't want to start flashing things until I know there isn't another longshot option to get this to work. I even loaded up linux and ran pblclear, which allegedly attempts to knock HTC phones out of being stuck in QHSUSB_DLOAD mode. Didn't work, but figured it was worth a shot, and seemed relatively harmless.
Why I don't even know if it's SDS: The reason I'm asking this is because I'm completely at a loss. SDS appears to affect i9000s after 150-200 days, OR when people incorrectly flash a ROM, or something happens during flashing or modification. My phone is an ATT i747 has been fully operative for 600+ days, and I haven't done any flashing, rooting, whathaveyou in nearly two years (and it was just that simple autoroot that I ran once).
What I'm wondering: I really want to get this phone working, because of hundreds of images, notes, data, etc. that I have accrued over the past few years. Most of my videos and larger files were on my sd card, but literally hundreds of memories and works in progress that I would do insane things for were saved to the phone. I'm an idiot for not backing it up, but I wasn't doing anything to the phone, so wasn't expecting such a catastrophe. Will JTAG work? What about a debricking microsd image? Most of the ones I can find are for 4.1.2 or 4.1.3 -- are there any for 4.1.1? I'm nearly certain 4.1.1 is my version, because IICR 4.1.2 and 4.1.3 don't even have the perso256 disable menu, and it's why I had not upgraded to them. It seems like the microsd rewrites would wipe the contents, and then I would have to quickly attempt a recovery on the data? Or have there been any cases with similar failures that are something else dying on the board? To be perfectly honest, if it appears to be an issue with the board, it's not beyond my ability to perform BGA rework and remove the emmc entirely, and transplant it onto a new board, but I would ///really/// like to avoid that.
Thanks for reading... :angel:
Edit:
Additional information: I forgot to mention that I have found pages such as this samsung-galaxy-s3-sgh-i747-i747m-repair-dead-boot-1755452 [I'm afraid you'll have to google it because I can't post links if you want to look TT^TT] which have files that say, for example, "Samsung SGH-I747 Repair Boot Supported" if using JTAG. So, if there aren't suggestions about how I can fix my phone with an sdcard unbrick, or something else, does anyone know whether or not doing a boot repair will unbrick a phone without wiping the ROM itself? Thanks again~~
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
same thing just happened to my 20 month old att s3.i unlocked the bootloader and flashed a twrp recovery.the phone was on 4.1.1 and rooted.
now just a lifeless phone
thorur said:
same thing just happened to my 20 month old att s3.i unlocked the bootloader and flashed a twrp recovery.the phone was on 4.1.1 and rooted.
now just a lifeless phone
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Did it die closely after the unlocking/flashing? Or a long time after? Or was the unlocking/flashing an attempt to save the phone? Ever get it fixed? I'm so anxious!
I never heard of qualcomm chips doing this. There is a app called emmc brickbug check on the market though it won't be of much use to you now.....but it allows you to check the mem. Controller chip and check if its a "sane chip" and allows you to probe the memory for any bad sectors.....its really quite a nice app
Sent from my ATT Samsung Galaxy SIII using TapaTalk
crazymonkey05 said:
I never heard of qualcomm chips doing this. There is a app called emmc brickbug check on the market though it won't be of much use to you now.....but it allows you to check the mem. Controller chip and check if its a "sane chip" and allows you to probe the memory for any bad sectors.....its really quite a nice app
Sent from my ATT Samsung Galaxy SIII using TapaTalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, thanks for the input! Makes me feel a better hopefully the emmc isn't completely fried. I just really want my files, and am continually irritated at myself for having been so stupid to not make backups.. although I have phones from 10+ years ago that have never completely died in such an unexpected manner. It's quite the agonizing wait for a JTAG programmer to come in the mail. If I can manage to get it to boot from SD, which I haven't been able to do so far, do you think it's logical for me to simply reflash the bootloader/CWM, then attempt boot? It shouldn't erase files, right?
You can try a bootloader and recovery flash which might yield results.....and the plus side of that is that it won't wipe the memory unless you format the /data partition or you do a full Odin restore with ROM kernel and everything
Sent from my ATT Samsung Galaxy SIII using TapaTalk
crazymonkey05 said:
You can try a bootloader and recovery flash which might yield results.....and the plus side of that is that it won't wipe the memory unless you format the /data partition or you do a full Odin restore with ROM kernel and everything
Sent from my ATT Samsung Galaxy SIII using TapaTalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've also searched everywhere for a debrick image for 4.1.1 AT&T... anyone know where I can get one? All I can find are ones for 4.1.3 =\
EXACT same problem here, let me know if you find anything
(Btw, my phone also had the "power button stuck down" issue, but your phone will vibrate when you put the battery in if this is the issue.)
If I'm not mistaken you will be able to Odin to 4.1.1 while using the 4.3 SD card debrick (again this is just guessing)
Sent from my ATT Samsung Galaxy SIII using TapaTalk
I've tried the SD card debricks for 4.3, and still nothing happens. Yea, I also don't get vibrate. As a long shot, I actually installed the qualcomm drivers and ran the qdload.sh script to attempt to send a signal which kicks the phone out of that mode (works on some... I want to say, HTC, phones), but, yea, I think the emmc just failed somehow. I'm hoping that the failure is just in the bootloader segment, and that by jtag reflashing the bootloader area, I should be able to boot. Either that, or even if one of the memory sectors died, hopefully it's not the one with my data partition. I still can't believe this ! Out of all the electronics I've ever used, aside from a hard drive or two, I've never had something like a phone just kick the bucket with no warning. gha !
Also, thanks for all the tips and stuff, guys and gals. Tell me if you figure out anything, and I'll let you know if I get it fixed with jtag.
OK plz let us know how it goes! I don't want to sound rude but your phone would be the only snapdragon I have ever seen fail....and I've been using snapdragons since the s1 on a HTC wildfire s
Sent from my ATT Samsung Galaxy SIII using TapaTalk
crazymonkey05 said:
OK plz let us know how it goes! I don't want to sound rude but your phone would be the only snapdragon I have ever seen fail....and I've been using snapdragons since the s1 on a HTC wildfire s
Sent from my ATT Samsung Galaxy SIII using TapaTalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ZOMG SO RUDE > haha, j/k ;P Yea, no problem, dude/dudette! I know how it feels reading threads with no followup... I'm actually surprised that people have come out of the proverbial woodwork mentioning having similar problems to me ! It really sucks spending inordinate amounts of time reading threads and not arriving at a definitive conclusion... so, yea, I especially want to let people know if there is a fix, and/or how I did it.
So, with regard to what you said about the snapdragons not failing... yea. This is rekking my mind, tbh, because I've just never had a device insta-fail on me like this (aside from some old computer hard drives that were server backed up, but yea that's essentially par for the course on that medium [yay for S.M.A.R.T.]). Especially a device that I'd only had for less than 2 years, and though my GS3 has heavy usage, I treat it very well (no drops, water, etc.)... so, yea.
Also, a minority of people with whom I have spoken via the æther have also experienced similar emmc failures on i747s, as well ! Which I was not expecting. It's still insane, though, to believe that, out of such a small percentage of phones that could potentially experience SDS, and then which ones actually do experience it... and then to not even have an i9000 and /still/ experience it on an i747... I feel as though I've won the lotto. Except ****ty.
I'm waiting on parts to come in, then surgery will commence.
Did you try going into download mode? If you can so that then the phone is fine. Another thing is try reflashing stock Odin which will erase msgs and stuff but not music or pics unless u tick "repartition".
Sent from my SGH-I747M using Tapatalk
Open serial port...OK
Connecting to the RIFF Box...OK
Firmware Version: 1.37, JTAG Manager Version: 1.56
Selected Resurrector: [Samsung I747 V1.0.5095.46594]
Connecting to the dead body...OK
Detected dead body ID: 0xhexhereisOK[redacted] - CORRECT!
Set I/O Voltage reads as 1.81V, TCK Frequency is 1 MHz
Resurrection sequence started.
Establish communication with the phone...OK
Initializing internal hardware configuration...OK
Uploading resurrector data into memory...OK
Starting communication with resurrector...OK
Detected an Initialized FLASH1 Chip, ID: 0x0015/0x0100 (000000, 0x000400000000 Bytes = 16.00 GB)
Detected an Initialized FLASH2 Chip, ID: 0x0015/0x0100 (000000, 0x000000080000 Bytes = 0.50 MB)
No Resurrection Data is available for the eMMC Chip with Capacity = 16.00GB
WARNING!!! Using Resurrection Data for the eMMC Chip with Capacity = 14,68GB
Flashing the dead body...
ERROR: DCC Loader has reported Error Code = 0x51 (0x000000). Trying to recover...OK
ERROR: DCC Loader has reported Error Code = 0x51 (0x000000). Trying to recover...OK
ERROR: DCC Loader has reported Error Code = 0x51 (0x000000). Trying to recover...OK
ERROR: Stopped due to multiple communication errors. Terminating at 0x0003AB3FBE00
Had to reduce the speed to that 2MHz/1MHz to get communication to work. So, 0x51 is a DCC power failure problem... but it is able to detect the initialized chips. So.. not really sure how to proceed at this point. I haven't checked the signal quality on my NRST line, which apparently can cause problems. Some people have increased the voltage from 1.8 to say 1.9, but doing something like that requires me to actually make my own resurrection file, which I haven't had the time to do yet.
Anyone seen a problem with something like this before?
The 000000 is somewhat unsettling, as the chip is apparently supposed to report some ID#? Although, the failures that I'm getting don't seem to be the typical ones that happen when the emmc becomes completely toasted.
Oh, yea... I can't seem to figure out wth is up with --> WARNING!!! Using Resurrection Data for the eMMC Chip with Capacity = 14,68GB
Like..... ??? I think I'm using the most up to date resurrector?!
EDIT: Dumping out the entire contents of the emmc (haven't had errors so far, but it will take a while at 1 MHz), into a bin file (this avoids the bad sectors in the bootloader).
Does anyone know what to do with the resultant *.bin file? I think that if I got another surrogate GS3, I'd be able to write that onto the phone, essentially cloning my dead phone. I'd like to avoid having to do that, though -- does anyone know how to write one of DCC bin jtag file dumps into a readable file system?

Ruined my phone can't go into bootloader or recovery, wont even charge.

I got a phone from a family member that was a at&t note 2, it was freezing while charging and wasn't turning on. So I downloaded odin and OS for it knowing that that would probably fix it(but i could still go into recovery and the mode to use odin[drawing a blank on the name]), so I unpacked the zip file with the OS, downloaded the drivers, but with the new odin update they put two letter words and i didn;t know witch was witch until it was too late, i picked bootloader instead of PDA). and it failed installing like it would because i picked the wrong one. Now the phone won't even charge, or connect to the laptop or turn on. Is there anything i can do or is the phone SOL?
Since you used Odin, I assume you have a Windows machine.
So connecting the phone to the PC does not yield any sort of entry in Device Manager? Have you tried leaving the phone on the charger for a while? Have you tried a more powerful charger?
no it does not :/ and i have tried that. but right after it happened i kept plugging it in and after i took it out, sometimes windows would tell me the system has crashed or something like that.
It sounds as if you have either major partition damage or a failed EMMC...
I've Lost a device as well under the same conditions.
The only repair I could ever find was to send in the device to Mobiletechvideos.com to get a JTAG repair done...
The charging issue you describe sounds as if you had a locked bootloader mismatch with the OS at the time you attempted a full flash.
Normally the flash would just fail in PDA mode using Odin...but in your case the bootloader flash was used which likely pushed partial or corrupted files to the partition...causing total failure...
The device can be saved but it'll set you back about $70.00 for JTAG and shipping....
http://www.mobiletechvideos.com/samsung-galaxy-note-2-jtag-brick-repair/
Josh does a great job...and if the device is clean you should consider the JTAG...
If that price is too high it's a paperweight...
Check out the site online and you can decide....
I personally won't upgrade beyond the note 2 because I enjoy this great phone...
Best of luck....g
can you give me a link on reviews on that site? i'll look around on google as well but i just want to make sure i'm not wasting my money. better be safe then sorry ya kno?
They have over 3,000,000 YouTube views and 1000's of Twitter and Facebook followers.
They have been around for a very long time...
For more reviews than you could ever count...just check them out by Googling them...
I'm not affiliated with mobiletechvideos.com.....I'm just a very satisfied customer...g

Mysterious i9190

Hello everyone! This is my first thread and I know it's the right site to ask this. (sorry for my english)
I bought this "suspicious" i9190 in Budapest 2 years ago. Since then it has been impossible to use it regulary.
Constant rebooting and freezes are part of its daily routine. As well as stopped apps and processes messages in a ridiculous way.
I have tried millions of ROMs, officials and customs, all kind of wipes and restores. I have even tried the eMMC brickbug apps looking for damaged chips or internal memory: Nothing, the phone is perfectly fine.
But here are some facts that may be relevant to find the problem:
- The phone came with the IMEI number scrached in the back of the battery.
- I've been using the phone for hours and hours perfectly fine as long as no update is performed and the Sync option is off.
- Doing the above I have even downloaded and used some little apps with no problems.
- When the major apps are installed, like Facebook and Instagram the phone begins to die, popping more and more "stoppped working" errors.
- The processes that fail the most are the google type but, in general, every single existing process has failed in this 2 years.
- I have noticed that when you start the phone for the first time after a wipe or a new ROM, it is better to create a new google account than using an existing one because the existing one, I think, will start updating everything while the new one will not. Anyway, using a new google account collapses the phone sooner or later.
Sorry for the long post, fellas. But I wanted to give you all the possible info I have about this phone.
Hoping for you can help me fix this issue... Have a good day.
Galaxy S4 mini GT-I9190
I'd guess at a hardware issue in the radio and related circuitry as you seem to get the issues when apps that send/receive data frequently are in use. Though it could be anything. You probably need to get it checked by an authorised Samsung repair centre ......... if your phone is not too "suspicious!"
IronRoo said:
I'd guess at a hardware issue in the radio and related circuitry as you seem to get the issues when apps that send/receive data frequently are in use. Though it could be anything. You probably need to get it checked by an authorised Samsung repair centre ......... if your phone is not too "suspicious!"
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for your reply! Do you have an idea why they scratched the IMEI number? Maybe that could take me to where the exact problem is. Here is a photo of the back
http :// imgur. com/Sa0ptSm
Sorry for the link, my account still cannot post outside links
I was going to say they scratched the IMEI number probably because it was stolen so that it could not be tracked, but it is quite easy to see the number so that is probably not the reason. One place I used to work at the test department used to scratch the bar codes on faulty PCB's so that they cannot be scanned back into the system by mistake (if the fault tag comes off, etc) as that computer system did not prevent scrapped boards from being re-entered. So I would guess this may be the case with your phone, but of course we can't know for certain! But based on this and all tests of different ROMs etc you did I suspect it is quite likely the explanation.
What I would do is look for the same model that has a cracked screen on ebay etc so it's cheap to buy then swap the PCB's from the cracked phone to your good screen (swap everything to prevent the possibility of the boards not working due to different revision numbers, as has been reported when replacing the power boards on our phone). You can also buy a repair kit for a few dollars on ebay with screwdrivers, pry tool etc
http://www.ebay.com/itm/10-In1-Repa...et-for-Mobile-Phone-iPhone-6-5s-/281869038536
If the PCB on your phone was scratched to show it was faulty then taking to a repair shop is probably a waste of money, unless then run an assessment for free before they repair it.
Hope you can fix it for a few dollars!
not sure if this helps but that I actually managed read off the IMEI code correctly and it turns out its a turkish registered phone, I can PM you IMEI code if you want, also its not reported stolen (but i am guessing its most likely is), anyways thats all I was here to say, good luck.

dm-verity verification failed

So i did the current update and now my phone is tweaking. I get random boot loops, when charging dies out. I get the dm-verity verification faild in recovery when clearing cadhe. So im not rooted, all stock. Oh and when it dies and turn on it takes me to the screen to connect to odin. Says mmc read fail. Not sure what to any help would be appreciated. Thinking about rooting and seing if that helps.
Your phone shows modified status but was never rooted? If so, that's possible with corrupt or defective memory.
Among the errors you describe, eMMC read error indicates memory component failure. Could be a bad flash but likely component failure.
You could try emergency recovery in Smart Switch or KIES on your PC. Or Odin the latest firmware available. But with update safeguards, it's likely main board or eMMC component needs replacement. The failure isn't normal but could possibly be induced by using bad battery or insufficient charge during update. You should have 60% or better on a healthy battery before updating.
Not saying the battery is the issue but if it's not fairly new or older than a year, it may need replacing. Once you've satisfied the need and have the original USB in good condition, you can proceed to try to recover it. But you could also request that Sprint tech or Samsung Experience at Best Buy reprogram it.
If that helps long term, you could say it was corruption but if not, component failure. Since it was never rooted, I'd complain to Samsung and open a complaint citing the numerous eMMC failures. This type of failure is too common to Note 4. You may get answers like lag is normal- phone isn't new so take pictures of abnormal pop-ups or boots to Odin mode that are intermittent and may not appear to them in review of your phone as submit insisting that isn't normal. What I think Samsung could offer to make things right is economical repair. Am I right or will they comply? I'd think not likely or timely but couldn't hurt if you're willing to put in the effort. Another economical repair would be certified used main board replacement or equivalent component replacement by bonded repair facility. The used main board was retailing for $100 last I checked.
Seems there are few that pursue repair of their Note 4 or just don't follow-up with updates. If you want to retain a phone with removable battery, it may warrant repair to at least have for a backup or return to service when repaired.
Sent from my SM-N920P using Tapatalk
Thank you so much for the reply!

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