Unable to boot into fastboot - FireTV Gen1 - Fire TV Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

I was in the process of updating both my fireTV and fireTV stick and accidentally pushed the montoya recovery meant for the stick to the firetv and ran “sh /data/media/0/montoya_recovery_v1.zip”.
Now when my FireTV boots up it I get the white Amazon logo for a bit, it then flashes a couple of times and then it reboots and repeats this process. The bootloader is fully unlocked, but I am unable to get into fastboot to try and push the correct version of TWRP back to the unit. I have a USB A-A cable connected to my PC, I have the ADB drivers installed, and I see the Android device under computer manager briefly (disappears when the unit reboots), but I am unable to issue the “fastboot devices” successfully or issue the “fastboot flash recovery.img” command successfully (hangs on waiting for device). It then continues to go into a loop.
Any ideas as to why the device is not stopping at the white logo screen and not going into fastboot?
Thanks in advance!
Landonfoot

Related

[HELP] KFHD 8.9 Red Screen

Hi all,
First off, this is my first post :victory: and I need some help.
Last night I used this thread to successfully get root access on my Kindle Fire HD 8.9".
Then, wanting to install CyanogenMod 10.1 on the Kindle, I tried to install the second bootloader and TWRP Recovery. At this point, the Kindle began to reboot. When it turned on, the Kindle Fire logo appeared, shined a few times, then blank red covered the screen.
I can turn on/turn off the Kindle, but all I see is this red screen. Anything I can do?
I've looked at factory cables, hopefully there are some things I can try before I buy that...?
A factory cable won't work on the 8.9
Disconnect the USB cable
Turn the device completely off (hold power button for 10 seconds)
Enter: fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product
Reconnect the USB cable
As the device powers up, if your fastboot drivers are working properly, the device should boot into fastboot mode. Use it to restore your saved partition images.
Thanks for reply
Hi soupmagnet,
Where do I enter the command "fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product"?
In command prompt on the computer?
EDIT: Self-explanatory It worked perfectly - thanks!
HAVING SAME PROBLEM KFHD 8.9 2nd Gen RED BOOT.
I have the same problem. Can boot into fast mode with KFFA, but restoring stock settings seem to be Impossible. I have tried to restore with ADB, ADB (Fastboot), KFFA, and KF SRT. No matter what red boot screen will not go away and device can only fastboot. Any help?
JonnyLawless said:
I have the same problem. Can boot into fast mode with KFFA, but restoring stock settings seem to be Impossible. I have tried to restore with ADB, ADB (Fastboot), KFFA, and KF SRT. No matter what red boot screen will not go away and device can only fastboot. Any help?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Red screen is also considered a hard brick. Sometimes restore does not work.
Same happened here
Today I rooted my kindle fire 2nd gen10.4.8 using vroot I also installed a boot loader that as soon as I tried downloading shut my kindle fire down and when I tried unsuccessfully to turn it back on the red kindle fire symbol came for a second and then the careen was red
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=46154263 follow this and you should all be away from that red screen
Sent from my Amazon Jem using XDA Premium 4 mobile app
same here but worse
My kindle is rooted and when i flahsed a recovery it asked if i wanted to boot into recovery after i said yes then when it booted the kindle fire logo appeared for about 1 second then a red screen slid in from the side now it wont boot into recovery fastboot or normal mode and i have reinstalled kindle drivers several times as well as fastboot.exe and also adb.exe and nothing works the computer sees it for 3 seconds if i hold power volume down but then it goes to red screen
You need to run this on the computer: fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product
Once it says waiting for device, plug the kindle in while it is off, if the bootloader isn't too damaged it should kick into fastboot. Hopefully you also installed the fastboot drivers previously or your best bet might be a Linux live distro like Ubuntu.
Sent from my Amazon Tate using Tapatalk
stunts513 said:
You need to run this on the computer: fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product
Once it says waiting for device, plug the kindle in while it is off, if the bootloader isn't too damaged it should kick into fastboot. Hopefully you also installed the fastboot drivers previously or your best bet might be a Linux live distro like Ubuntu.
Sent from my Amazon Tate using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
fastboot doesn't recognize if there is a way to fix this or a way to keep the kindle connected for more then 3 seconds i would appreciate it
What does the kindle show up as for those 3 seconds? Because usually it shows up as a jem device (without the driver installed) or a adb device (with fastboot drivers installed) and in those 3 seconds that command gets it to go into fastboot mode so you can fix it. All that needs doing is the bootimg needs to be flashed or erased and fastboot should be more cooperative.
Sent from my Amazon Tate using Tapatalk
I ran the fastboot command like you said, and got my kindle to go into fastboot but i have no idea what to do next.
should i run certain files?if so please tell me where and how?
Use kindle fire first aid or system restore tool for the rest once it is in fastboot mode or flash a backup of your boot image with "fastboot -i 0x949 flash boot boot.img", that should fix a red screen/bad loop scenario where fastboot is not working well, etc.
thats the problem
stunts513 said:
What does the kindle show up as for those 3 seconds? Because usually it shows up as a jem device (without the driver installed) or a adb device (with fastboot drivers installed) and in those 3 seconds that command gets it to go into fastboot mode so you can fix it. All that needs doing is the bootimg needs to be flashed or erased and fastboot should be more cooperative.
Sent from my Amazon Tate using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i cant tell what it shows up as because by the time it shows up in the device manager the kindle disconnects
how do i flash a boot.img if the kindle is only connected for 3 seconds and fastboot isn't working
A ubuntu live os probably would do the trick
May I give up kindle fire hd 8.9 ?
LinearEquation said:
Red screen is also considered a hard brick. Sometimes restore does not work.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As you told. I try use fastboot by KFFirst Aide or KF SRT 2.1 but not thing chance. My screen still blank red. So Sad .
My Kindle Fire HD 8.9 Use stock rom from amazon 8.5.1.
Have we have another way to fix it ?

[Q] bootloop stuck, can't fastboot, need case open short instruction

Background: Kindle Fire 1st generation. Stuck on "kindle fire" logo screen. This is a stock KF -- never any previous attempts to root it.
KFU is unable to connect to the device -- or get it into fastboot. I purchased a factory cable, and that also was not successful. (BTW, I have a different KF 1st gen that works fine, and KFU recognizes it and can fastboot perfectly fine with that one).
I also attempted using the Firekit utility on a Debian Linux system. The tool seems to have the same issue -- gives me a "error: device not found" message when trying to set bootmode.
The "Post #1" HOW-TO by kinfauns talks about the bad bootloader scenario, and it mentions opening the case to short a circuit in order to enable USB boot. Can someone please point me to a link regarding this shorting technique? I think that is my next step.
Thanks,
lob455
lob455 said:
Background: Kindle Fire 1st generation. Stuck on "kindle fire" logo screen. This is a stock KF -- never any previous attempts to root it.
KFU is unable to connect to the device -- or get it into fastboot. I purchased a factory cable, and that also was not successful. (BTW, I have a different KF 1st gen that works fine, and KFU recognizes it and can fastboot perfectly fine with that one).
I also attempted using the Firekit utility on a Debian Linux system. The tool seems to have the same issue -- gives me a "error: device not found" message when trying to set bootmode.
The "Post #1" HOW-TO by kinfauns talks about the bad bootloader scenario, and it mentions opening the case to short a circuit in order to enable USB boot. Can someone please point me to a link regarding this shorting technique? I think that is my next step.
Thanks,
lob455
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Does it show up in Device manager? as kindle, android phone, or something else...?
sd_shadow said:
Does it show up in Device manager? as kindle, android phone, or something else...?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No. When connected to the Windows7 machine, the bootloop-stuck KF is not recognized at all (regardless of whether using the standard USB cable or the factory cable).
On the working KF which was purchased from Amazon at the same time, Device Manager shows this working KF as "Android phone".
lob455 said:
No. When connected to the Windows7 machine, the bootloop-stuck KF is not recognized at all (regardless of whether using the standard USB cable or the factory cable).
On the working KF which was purchased from Amazon at the same time, Device Manager shows this working KF as "Android phone".
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Fairly certain your battery is dead http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1623244 . If so you can shock it`s inards and hook up fastboot cable all day long and it wont make a bit of difference till you get a new battery.
Thepooch said:
Fairly certain your battery is dead http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1623244 . If so you can shock it`s inards and hook up fastboot cable all day long and it wont make a bit of difference till you get a new battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks to Thepooch. Progress has been made. I was admittedly very skeptical about the dead battery theory. This Kindle Fire had been connected to a charger for literally days if not weeks. But I grabbed my wife's 2A charger and connected it.
Okay. Here is where the weird part starts.....
After several hours on the 2A charger, I hit the power button and got a TWRP Recovery screen! I was astounded. When using KFU, I have always gotten "ADB Status: Offline" and "Boot Status: Unknown" with this unit. I still do. But I have certainly tried the KFU selections of "Install Latest TWRP Recovery" and "Install Latest FireFireFire". Even though the utility returns messages that imply it was not successful (typically "< waiting for device >"), the only thing I can figure is that it was successful at least once. Even today when I run KFU, it still behaves as though it does not recognize the unit. Also, Device Manager still does not see the Kindle Fire.
So, now I have a Kindle Fire that seems to have good TWRP Recovery and FFF (I get the white & blue Kindle Fire logo now when booting). And this is a good thing, and a major step past the infinine white and orange Kindle Fire logo boot screen.
However, since I can't apparently connect to the unit via USB, I can't put a ROM on it to install. This is where I am stuck now.
Please let me know if you have any recommendations.
Thanks again.
lob455 said:
Thanks to Thepooch. Progress has been made. I was admittedly very skeptical about the dead battery theory. This Kindle Fire had been connected to a charger for literally days if not weeks. But I grabbed my wife's 2A charger and connected it.
Okay. Here is where the weird part starts.....
After several hours on the 2A charger, I hit the power button and got a TWRP Recovery screen! I was astounded. When using KFU, I have always gotten "ADB Status: Offline" and "Boot Status: Unknown" with this unit. I still do. But I have certainly tried the KFU selections of "Install Latest TWRP Recovery" and "Install Latest FireFireFire". Even though the utility returns messages that imply it was not successful (typically "< waiting for device >"), the only thing I can figure is that it was successful at least once. Even today when I run KFU, it still behaves as though it does not recognize the unit. Also, Device Manager still does not see the Kindle Fire.
So, now I have a Kindle Fire that seems to have good TWRP Recovery and FFF (I get the white & blue Kindle Fire logo now when booting). And this is a good thing, and a major step past the infinine white and orange Kindle Fire logo boot screen.
However, since I can't apparently connect to the unit via USB, I can't put a ROM on it to install. This is where I am stuck now.
Please let me know if you have any recommendations.
Thanks again.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
First you must fix your driver. Unless it shows up in device manager as android composite adb interface. I still have question of it's proper installation since mounting sdcard is connected to a proper install.
Code:
adb push rom.zip/sdcard/
shift plus right click on kfu's tool folder select open command window here. Type
Code:
adb devices
you should get a number string code 1234××××××××× device if it says offline then driver is not proper. If it says 1234×××××××××× device then your good.
Type adb push <---leave one space here drag and drop the file you wish to push into terminal , then one more space , /sdcard/ it takes some time depending on file size. When it's done it will show records in and records out along with the time that the push took. If successful make a backup and then wipe cache, dalvik, and system. Flash rom.zip/gapps.zip reboot system. There is a catch 22 is the recovery packaged with KFU new enough to flash newer ROMs with full s-Linux support follow the steps in my guide highlighted in my signature to at least flash rooted stock before proceeding. @sd_shadow 's Rom would be perfect for first flash.
Edit: Side note modifications need to be made to driver to keep adb working on custom ROMs as some have been added prior this helps but the device ID changes with each new build ics, kit kat and so forth.
Thepooch said:
First you must fix your driver. Unless it shows up in device manager as android composite adb interface. I still have question of it's proper installation since mounting sdcard is connected to a proper install.
Code:
adb push rom.zip/sdcard/
shift plus right click on kfu's tool folder select open command window here. Type
Code:
adb devices
you should get a number string code 1234××××××××× device if it says offline then driver is not proper. If it says 1234×××××××××× device then your good.
Type adb push <---leave one space here drag and drop the file you wish to push into terminal , then one more space , /sdcard/ it takes some time depending on file size. When it's done it will show records in and records out along with the time that the push took. If successful make a backup and then wipe cache, dalvik, and system. Flash rom.zip/gapps.zip reboot system. There is a catch 22 is the recovery packaged with KFU new enough to flash newer ROMs with full s-Linux support follow the steps in my guide highlighted in my signature to at least flash rooted stock before proceeding. @sd_shadow 's Rom would be perfect for first flash.
Edit: Side note modifications need to be made to driver to keep adb working on custom ROMs as some have been added prior this helps but the device ID changes with each new build ics, kit kat and so forth.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks @Thepooch for the detailed reply.
I spent several hours playing with this Kindle Fire, a different Kindle Fire (stock unit that works), regular USB and factory cables, kfu, and adb. Here are my observations that may or may not be significant:
1) With the working stock Kindle Fire: this shows up in Device Manager as Android Phone > Android Composite ADB Interface. In KFU, this working Kindle Fire shows ADB Status: Online and Boot Status: Unknown. If I run the "adb devices" comand, it happily gives me a 17BExxxxxxxxxxxx response.
2) With the non-working Kindle Fire that I am working with: This does not show up in Device Manager UNLESS I am in the FFF (white & blue logo screen) with the 3 boot choices listed at the bottom of the screen (Normal Boot, Recovery, Reset Boot Mode). If those 3 choices are shown, then Device Manager recognizes this as Android Phone > Android ADB Interface (it does not say "Composite" -- no matter how hard I try to delete that Android ADB Interface driver). This non-working Kindle Fire then disappears from Device Manager completely if in any TWRP screen or any FFF screen other than the one with the 3 boot choices at the bottom. When I run the "adb devices" command, I get a message "List of devices attached" with nothing below (no numbers or anything).
I suspect that you are correct -- that I am fighting a driver issue -- but I don't know how to get the Windows 7 computer to recognize the non-working Kindle Fire as a Android Composite ADB Interface. It happily recognizes the working Kindle Fire as Composite, so I know the driver is on the PC.
Any ideas of how to go forward are appreciated. I think that I have tried everything that I know to try on that Windows 7 PC, so at this point, my next plan is to play with this Kindle Fire using the FireKit tools and a Debian Linux PC. Maybe that will help -- or at least I will learn something.
lob455 said:
Thanks @Thepooch for the detailed reply.
I spent several hours playing with this Kindle Fire, a different Kindle Fire (stock unit that works), regular USB and factory cables, kfu, and adb. Here are my observations that may or may not be significant:
1) With the working stock Kindle Fire: this shows up in Device Manager as Android Phone > Android Composite ADB Interface. In KFU, this working Kindle Fire shows ADB Status: Online and Boot Status: Unknown. If I run the "adb devices" comand, it happily gives me a 17BExxxxxxxxxxxx response.
2) With the non-working Kindle Fire that I am working with: This does not show up in Device Manager UNLESS I am in the FFF (white & blue logo screen) with the 3 boot choices listed at the bottom of the screen (Normal Boot, Recovery, Reset Boot Mode). If those 3 choices are shown, then Device Manager recognizes this as Android Phone > Android ADB Interface (it does not say "Composite" -- no matter how hard I try to delete that Android ADB Interface driver). This non-working Kindle Fire then disappears from Device Manager completely if in any TWRP screen or any FFF screen other than the one with the 3 boot choices at the bottom. When I run the "adb devices" command, I get a message "List of devices attached" with nothing below (no numbers or anything).
I suspect that you are correct -- that I am fighting a driver issue -- but I don't know how to get the Windows 7 computer to recognize the non-working Kindle Fire as a Android Composite ADB Interface. It happily recognizes the working Kindle Fire as Composite, so I know the driver is on the PC.
Any ideas of how to go forward are appreciated. I think that I have tried everything that I know to try on that Windows 7 PC, so at this point, my next plan is to play with this Kindle Fire using the FireKit tools and a Debian Linux PC. Maybe that will help -- or at least I will learn something.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Android adb interface alone is a detection of fastboot composite is normal boot. This could be due to a partially broken shell try while the device is in recovery not at the bootloader your bootmode is iffy.
What is current Twrp versiom? 2.7.1.0?
If the problem is Kindle software, a could try a couple of things
adb commands should not work in bootloader mode
fastboot commands should work in bootloader mode
try
fastboot devices
if that works could try flashing twrp, I would Flash a different version so you know it worked, like 2.6.x.x http://techerrata.com/browse/twrp2/blaze
sd_shadow said:
What is current Twrp versiom? 2.7.1.0?
If the problem is Kindle software, a could try a couple of things
adb commands should not work in bootloader mode
fastboot commands should work in bootloader mode
try
fastboot devices
if that works could try flashing twrp, I would Flash a different version so you know it worked, like 2.6.x.x ..................
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks @sd_shadow for the reply.
In recovery mode, TWRP reports that it is version 2.6.3.1
I did try the "fastboot devices" command. When I am in the initial FFF screen (blue & white kindle fire logo with "Press power button for boot menu") or I am in the FFF menu with the 3 boot choices at the bottom (Normal Boot, Recovery, Reset Boot Mode), the "fastboot devices" command returns "0123456789ABCDEF fastboot". I didn't make up that number. It reports the hexadecimal digits in order from 0 through F, followed by the word "fastboot". It is pretty apparent that this is not a valid device ID number, but it is reporting something. I just don't know what it means.
If I am in any screen other than those, the "fastboot devices" command returns nothing, and it goes back at the command prompt.
lob455 said:
Thanks @sd_shadow for the reply.
In recovery mode, TWRP reports that it is version 2.6.3.1
I did try the "fastboot devices" command. When I am in the initial FFF screen (blue & white kindle fire logo with "Press power button for boot menu") or I am in the FFF menu with the 3 boot choices at the bottom (Normal Boot, Recovery, Reset Boot Mode), the "fastboot devices" command returns "0123456789ABCDEF fastboot". I didn't make up that number. It reports the hexadecimal digits in order from 0 through F, followed by the word "fastboot". It is pretty apparent that this is not a valid device ID number, but it is reporting something. I just don't know what it means.
If I am in any screen other than those, the "fastboot devices" command returns nothing, and it goes back at the command prompt.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I press the power button, to show boot menu (Normal Boot, Recovery, Reset Boot Mode) so it will pause the boot process for 2 mins or so.
the "0123456789ABCDEF fastboot" could be good, I believe that is what i usually get, and would go ahead and flash twrp.
fastboot flash recovery openrecovery-twrp-2.6.3.1-otter.img (or whatever version you are trying)
or try the reboot command
fastboot reboot
When in recovery if there is no adb my first thought is driver. Two other things are possible missing or broken shell or broken recovery. I myself lean to the side of it being a driver issue. Attach your working Kindle to pc while in recovery. Type adb devices it should say 12345678 blah blah recovery. If it does not then it's your driver.
sd_shadow said:
I press the power button, to show boot menu (Normal Boot, Recovery, Reset Boot Mode) so it will pause the boot process for 2 mins or so.
the "0123456789ABCDEF fastboot" could be good, I believe that is what i usually get, and would go ahead and flash twrp.
fastboot flash recovery openrecovery-twrp-2.6.3.1-otter.img (or whatever version you are trying)
or try the reboot command
fastboot reboot
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
@sd_shadow -- the "fastboot flash recovery openrecovery-twrp-...." command worked, and TWRP now reports that it is running version 2.7.1.0 (it was 2.6.3.1). It was immensely satisfying to find a command that this Kindle seems to like. Seriously. Thank you.
My next stupid question is, can I use another fastboot command to program the ROM, or can I use some fastboot command to load the ROM on sdcard via USB and then install it with TWRP? If I can do either of those things, then I think this problem is licked.
lob455 said:
@sd_shadow -- the "fastboot flash recovery openrecovery-twrp-...." command worked, and TWRP now reports that it is running version 2.7.1.0 (it was 2.6.3.1). It was immensely satisfying to find a command that this Kindle seems to like. Seriously. Thank you.
My next stupid question is, can I use another fastboot command to program the ROM, or can I use some fastboot command to load the ROM on sdcard via USB and then install it with TWRP? If I can do either of those things, then I think this problem is licked.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just place a Rom on your Sdcard and flash it.
lob455 said:
@sd_shadow -- the "fastboot flash recovery openrecovery-twrp-...." command worked, and TWRP now reports that it is running version 2.7.1.0 (it was 2.6.3.1). It was immensely satisfying to find a command that this Kindle seems to like. Seriously. Thank you.
My next stupid question is, can I use another fastboot command to program the ROM, or can I use some fastboot command to load the ROM on sdcard via USB and then install it with TWRP? If I can do either of those things, then I think this problem is licked.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Try the mount option in twrp again
sd_shadow said:
Try the mount option in twrp again
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
@sd_shadow @Thepooch
Thanks both of you for your help. But not all stories have a happy ending.
Over the past couple of days, I have been fighting a battle with the battery. The battery charge level indicated in the main TWRP menu would decrease even when connected to the 2A charger. I found that I could temporarily add a few percent charge by disconnecting the USB cable, reconnecting to the 2A charger. However, that trick would only last for a few minutes and a few percent charge, and then the power button light would go out and discharge would start again.
I think that the battery is now pretty dead. Power button light stays off event with the charger connected. If I disconnect the USB cable and reconnect, then I can *occasionally* get the power light to go green then orange, and it will fire up into a FFF blue&white logo screen, but then it shuts off again.
At this point, I think I have to decide if I want to spend the $ for a replacement battery and then try to fight the rooting battle again. I was never able to get the PC to recognize the device in normal mode so no adb -- only fastboot would work.
lob455 said:
@sd_shadow @Thepooch
Thanks both of you for your help. But not all stories have a happy ending.
Over the past couple of days, I have been fighting a battle with the battery. The battery charge level indicated in the main TWRP menu would decrease even when connected to the 2A charger. I found that I could temporarily add a few percent charge by disconnecting the USB cable, reconnecting to the 2A charger. However, that trick would only last for a few minutes and a few percent charge, and then the power button light would go out and discharge would start again.
I think that the battery is now pretty dead. Power button light stays off event with the charger connected. If I disconnect the USB cable and reconnect, then I can *occasionally* get the power light to go green then orange, and it will fire up into a FFF blue&white logo screen, but then it shuts off again.
At this point, I think I have to decide if I want to spend the $ for a replacement battery and then try to fight the rooting battle again. I was never able to get the PC to recognize the device in normal mode so no adb -- only fastboot would work.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The battery will always charge in recovery. When it goes flat you end in a 5 second boot loop. Try 2 things since your bootloader is equipped to hand such things as a failsafe attach to pc via USB right when it powers on long press power button till it powers off and let sit for 24 hours. The low level charge might even kick in and indicate charging on the screen if so let it sit and it will eventually boot properly on its own. Good luck
lob455 said:
@sd_shadow @Thepooch
Thanks both of you for your help. But not all stories have a happy ending.
Over the past couple of days, I have been fighting a battle with the battery. The battery charge level indicated in the main TWRP menu would decrease even when connected to the 2A charger. I found that I could temporarily add a few percent charge by disconnecting the USB cable, reconnecting to the 2A charger. However, that trick would only last for a few minutes and a few percent charge, and then the power button light would go out and discharge would start again.
I think that the battery is now pretty dead. Power button light stays off event with the charger connected. If I disconnect the USB cable and reconnect, then I can *occasionally* get the power light to go green then orange, and it will fire up into a FFF blue&white logo screen, but then it shuts off again.
At this point, I think I have to decide if I want to spend the $ for a replacement battery and then try to fight the rooting battle again. I was never able to get the PC to recognize the device in normal mode so no adb -- only fastboot would work.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I suspect it's the usb port that is bad, not the battery. The Kindle's usb port is weak and has a high failure rate, it can be repaired but likely not worth it, unless you know how to solder connections.

Problem getting device into fastboot mode.

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
Click to expand...
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.

KFHD 8.9 1st Gen. (Jem) Orange logo screen, not recognized, no ADB or fastboot

I've had a 1st Gen Kindle Fire HD 8.9 (or jem-pvt-prod-04) for ages. Rooted it years ago using KFFirstAide, which installed ADW Launcher (I think), but I never took the custom ROM plunge, and now I hardly ever look at it anymore. When I was thinking about installing custom ROM on my phone for the first time, I thought I'd get some practice on a device I don't mind losing (since I barely know what I'm doing...). Had the Kindle in Fastboot Mode and tried to flash different bootloader & recovery (from http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2128175 ), and I probably flashed something I shouldn't have and corrupted the bootloader:
fastboot -i 0x1949 flash bootloader kfhd8-u-boot-prod-8.1.4.bin
fastboot -i 0x1949 flash boot kfhd8-freedom-boot-8.4.6.img
fastboot -i 0x1949 flash recovery kfhd8-twrp-2.8.7.0-recovery.img
fastboot -i 0x1949 reboot
Upon rebooting, the Orange Kindle Fire logo appeared, and froze (it never became animated or turned blue). It is now stuck there. I have held down power button for 30+ seconds, I have tried that with and without using vol down and vol up buttons. I have fully depleted the battery and recharged. I have attempted six ways to Sunday to get my computer to recognize the device so I could issue ADB or Fastboot commands, but when I connect the USB cable and start up the Kindle, Device Manager (I'm on Win 10) sees it as Android Device and shows Android ADB Interface driver for literally one second, then sees the device as disconnected. When I show hidden devices, I can update the driver for that device, and I've tried various ones, but all to no avail. I went further out on a limb and created a Ubuntu Live USB (though I have never used a Linux OS on my PC). I tried to get Java and SDK working in Ubunto OS, but I'm way out of my depth.
If anybody has any suggestions (other than quit doing things to your devices that you don't fully understand...), or can help me try other ways to get the device recognized and able to receive ADB/Fastboot commands, I'd really appreciate it.

[Q] rooted KF (1st gen) stuck on Fastboot Mode screen not recognized by comp

Okay,
So I had an old kindle fire, wanted it to be an android tablet, blah blah blah
I rooted it, successfully installed TWRP and otterx and all even had it up and running
decided I wanted to try an otterx ROM and long story short while I was in fastboot mode I clicked an EXE. on my pc titled "FlashAll" without realizing what it was doing I had closed the prompt but when I looked at the kindle on the fastboot mode screen the bottom left corner said
"Erasing boot...
OKAY!
Erashing Cache..."
by this point I had already unplugged
So i tried a hard reboot
the screen stays black the power button lights up orange
but If i power it off and plug it in it goes to the "Fastbook Mode" screen but will not connect to the computer (windows 10)
I've checked the device manager and it is not there under any name whatsoever
there is no noise when its plugged in
I've traid fastboot and ADB commands and keep getting the <waiting for device>
I've tried KFU and Kindle Unbricker
I'm just at a loss i've gone through about 100+ posts and can't find a way to make my computer recognize a kindle that has no boot files
thenikm said:
Okay,
So I had an old kindle fire, wanted it to be an android tablet, blah blah blah
I rooted it, successfully installed TWRP and otterx and all even had it up and running
decided I wanted to try an otterx ROM and long story short while I was in fastboot mode I clicked an EXE. on my pc titled "FlashAll" without realizing what it was doing I had closed the prompt but when I looked at the kindle on the fastboot mode screen the bottom left corner said
"Erasing boot...
OKAY!
Erashing Cache..."
by this point I had already unplugged
So i tried a hard reboot
the screen stays black the power button lights up orange
but If i power it off and plug it in it goes to the "Fastbook Mode" screen but will not connect to the computer (windows 10)
I've checked the device manager and it is not there under any name whatsoever
there is no noise when its plugged in
I've traid fastboot and ADB commands and keep getting the <waiting for device>
I've tried KFU and Kindle Unbricker
I'm just at a loss i've gone through about 100+ posts and can't find a way to make my computer recognize a kindle that has no boot files
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Started a Thread [How To] Fix OtterX Install Errors, Partition sizes, Unable to Mount System... with some possible fixes for those having issues since converting to OtterX, with pushing files, failure to mount system errors when installing Lollipop Roms...
Sent from my PH-1 using XDA Labs

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