ok so i was in the process of sbf my phone to fix this. but i guess my battery was low and in the process it says "code corrupt" "battery low" and "cannot program" now its stuck on this screen and the battery wont charge. i tried the wall charger. it doesnt charge it just heats up the phone. and i tried the usb the green light stays on and i dont think it is charging either. would like some help or any feedback would b nice. thanks in advance.
js0uth said:
ok so i was in the process of sbf my phone to fix this. but i guess my battery was low and in the process it says "code corrupt" "battery low" and "cannot program" now its stuck on this screen and the battery wont charge. i tried the wall charger. it doesnt charge it just heats up the phone. and i tried the usb the green light stays on and i dont think it is charging either. would like some help or any feedback would b nice. thanks in advance.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You may be stuck for now. There is a process that involves splicing a wire from a usb cable and using it to place on the gold contacts on your battery to charge it manually.
How to Fix
One thing that you may notice is that when you have this error, your phone will not charge the battery and you'll only be able to see the screen turn on if its plugged into the wall. Somewhere on the screen it will say "Your Battery is Low" and "Cannot Reprogram" or something like that. The easiest way to get through this is to find a friend with a charged battery or go to your local Verizon store and see if they have a demo phone they can use to charge your battery. If you're like me though you will not be lucky in any sense like this so you will have to find the MacGyver inside of you and get a little creative. What you need for this is an old USB cord. One end must be a standard USB cable head and the other can pretty much be anything. Once you have that, follow these steps:
NOTE: I TAKE NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR DAMAGE DONE TO ANY PHONE, BATTERY, ETC. FOLLOW THESE STEPS WITH CAUTION TO AVOID RISK OF DAMAGE.
1. Take your cable and cut off one of the ends, leaving a standard USB plug at the opposite end to plug into your computer.
2. Now you need to strip about and inch of the wire off until you get to the core where you should see 4 colored wires (red, black, white, and green). The colors don't really matter and they may vary, just as long as you can see a red wire and a black wire.
3. Strip off about a quarter inch of the rubber sleeving on the red and black cables, exposing the actual metal wire.
4. Twist the metal strands of each of the wires a couple of times so that all of the wires from the black cable are together and all of the wires from the red cable are together. This is just to make sure that you don't create a short circuit.
5. Here's where it gets a little tricky. You are going to use this cable to make the phone think the battery is fully charged, when in fact you will just be powering the phone using the power from the USB port. Pull out the battery on your phone and find the 4 exposed metal slots (the battery terminals).
6. Each of the far terminals should be labeled with a plus (+) or a minus (-). What you need to do is put exposed leads on the red wire up to the positive terminal and the leads of the black wire up to the negative terminal.
7. While still holding the leads on their respective terminals, slide the battery back into place in the phone. MAKE SURE THE WIRES ARE NOT TOUCHING WHEN YOU PUT THE BATTERY INTO THE PHONE! BAD THINGS COULD HAPPEN ONCE YOU PLUG THE CORD INTO THE COMPUTER!
Note: As tested by parm289, you can skip step 7 and just use the cable to charge the battery if you'd like. He recommends allowing it to charge for 6-7 minutes before placing it back into the phone. Thanks parm!
8. Once the battery is in place and the wires are on the correct terminals but not touching each other, plug the USB cord into the computer. If all has gone as it should, the screen on your phone should come on (may have to press the power button) and the phone should be telling you that the battery charge is okay and that it is okay to program. YAY! Your phone is almost back to normal!
9. Go back up to the previous section in this post that tells you how to reflash the .sbf and follow all of the instructions there. Once that has finished flashing the .sbf to your phone, your phone should be back to working order! You will most likely have to redo the entire setup on your phone but at least your phone is no longer a fancy paperweight
This is a slightly dangerous process. If you know someone else with a Dx, I would try having them charge their battery and borrow it to get your phone back to a working condition. Then try charging your battery in their phone as well.
As another option, I believe there are external battery chargers....
For future reference, it is recommended at a MINIMUM to never sbf on less than like 70-80% battery life...cuz this situation could happen.
Good luck, hope you are able to get your phone back to a working state
SysAdmin-X said:
You may be stuck for now. There is a process that involves splicing a wire from a usb cable and using it to place on the gold contacts on your battery to charge it manually.
How to Fix
One thing that you may notice is that when you have this error, your phone will not charge the battery and you'll only be able to see the screen turn on if its plugged into the wall. Somewhere on the screen it will say "Your Battery is Low" and "Cannot Reprogram" or something like that. The easiest way to get through this is to find a friend with a charged battery or go to your local Verizon store and see if they have a demo phone they can use to charge your battery. If you're like me though you will not be lucky in any sense like this so you will have to find the MacGyver inside of you and get a little creative. What you need for this is an old USB cord. One end must be a standard USB cable head and the other can pretty much be anything. Once you have that, follow these steps:
NOTE: I TAKE NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR DAMAGE DONE TO ANY PHONE, BATTERY, ETC. FOLLOW THESE STEPS WITH CAUTION TO AVOID RISK OF DAMAGE.
1. Take your cable and cut off one of the ends, leaving a standard USB plug at the opposite end to plug into your computer.
2. Now you need to strip about and inch of the wire off until you get to the core where you should see 4 colored wires (red, black, white, and green). The colors don't really matter and they may vary, just as long as you can see a red wire and a black wire.
3. Strip off about a quarter inch of the rubber sleeving on the red and black cables, exposing the actual metal wire.
4. Twist the metal strands of each of the wires a couple of times so that all of the wires from the black cable are together and all of the wires from the red cable are together. This is just to make sure that you don't create a short circuit.
5. Here's where it gets a little tricky. You are going to use this cable to make the phone think the battery is fully charged, when in fact you will just be powering the phone using the power from the USB port. Pull out the battery on your phone and find the 4 exposed metal slots (the battery terminals).
6. Each of the far terminals should be labeled with a plus (+) or a minus (-). What you need to do is put exposed leads on the red wire up to the positive terminal and the leads of the black wire up to the negative terminal.
7. While still holding the leads on their respective terminals, slide the battery back into place in the phone. MAKE SURE THE WIRES ARE NOT TOUCHING WHEN YOU PUT THE BATTERY INTO THE PHONE! BAD THINGS COULD HAPPEN ONCE YOU PLUG THE CORD INTO THE COMPUTER!
Note: As tested by parm289, you can skip step 7 and just use the cable to charge the battery if you'd like. He recommends allowing it to charge for 6-7 minutes before placing it back into the phone. Thanks parm!
8. Once the battery is in place and the wires are on the correct terminals but not touching each other, plug the USB cord into the computer. If all has gone as it should, the screen on your phone should come on (may have to press the power button) and the phone should be telling you that the battery charge is okay and that it is okay to program. YAY! Your phone is almost back to normal!
9. Go back up to the previous section in this post that tells you how to reflash the .sbf and follow all of the instructions there. Once that has finished flashing the .sbf to your phone, your phone should be back to working order! You will most likely have to redo the entire setup on your phone but at least your phone is no longer a fancy paperweight
This is a slightly dangerous process. If you know someone else with a Dx, I would try having them charge their battery and borrow it to get your phone back to a working condition. Then try charging your battery in their phone as well.
As another option, I believe there are external battery chargers....
For future reference, it is recommended at a MINIMUM to never sbf on less than like 70-80% battery life...cuz this situation could happen.
Good luck, hope you are able to get your phone back to a working state
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
omg. lol. thanks. im actually going to try this. doesnt seem to hard. so all i have to do is cut one end of a usb and line up each correct wire to the battery terminal? right? no to shabby. ill give it a shot. and i will post my results. thanks again.
js0uth said:
omg. lol. thanks. im actually going to try this. doesnt seem to hard. so all i have to do is cut one end of a usb and line up each correct wire to the battery terminal? right? no to shabby. ill give it a shot. and i will post my results. thanks again.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ya you got it right. Not too bad. I personally think its not a horrible process, but would prefer to never have to do it =)
SysAdmin-X said:
Ya you got it right. Not too bad. I personally think its not a horrible process, but would prefer to never have to do it =)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ok i did it. but im not sure if i did it right. the screen stays on. and still has the same message. its still currently connected. i dunno. maybe i should give it a few mins?
NEVERMIND! its alive! lol. thanks man. now u can go though ur day knowing u made someones day. lol. thanks bro.
hopefull others will find this useful. it was quite easy i must say seriuosly took like 5-10 mins.
js0uth said:
NEVERMIND! its alive! lol. thanks man. now u can go though ur day knowing u made someones day. lol. thanks bro.
hopefull others will find this useful. it was quite easy i must say seriuosly took like 5-10 mins.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Haha glad I could help and hear that you're back in a working condition.
SysAdmin-X said:
Haha glad I could help and hear that you're back in a working condition.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
well. kinda. now its stuck on the bootloader with error codes. i sbf a few times same results. any idea?
js0uth said:
well. kinda. now its stuck on the bootloader with error codes. i sbf a few times same results. any idea?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well first...charge your battery =) Then I would try booting into Moto Recovery (hold down home button while holding power button) then when the android guy comes up, press the search button. Then try a wipe data/factory reset. Then try another sbf. Your SBF file may be bad too... If you are on the latest 2.3.340 update, then grab the FULL sbf here:
http://www.mydroidworld.com/forums/d...2-3-340-a.html
Make sure to have the latest Moto drivers and be using RSDlite v4.8 at least.
SysAdmin-X said:
Well first...charge your battery =) Then I would try booting into Moto Recovery (hold down home button while holding power button) then when the android guy comes up, press the search button. Then try a wipe data/factory reset. Then try another sbf. Your SBF file may be bad too... If you are on the latest 2.3.340 update, then grab the FULL sbf here:
http://www.mydroidworld.com/forums/d...2-3-340-a.html
Make sure to have the latest Moto drivers and be using RSDlite v4.8 at least.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i tried. keeps taking me back to the bootloader screen. thanks though...
Hmm what version were you on before you tried to sbf... Maybe you should try flashing the sbf 2.3.320
http://tinyurl.com/DroidX-Full-2-3-32
Sent from my DROIDX using XDA App
owenbeals said:
Hmm what version were you on before you tried to sbf... Maybe you should try flashing the sbf 2.3.320
http://tinyurl.com/DroidX-Full-2-3-32
Sent from my DROIDX using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
yezzir. i flashed the wrong sbf it was 320 i sbf 340. im getting closer n closer. now its stuck in a boot loop. any ideas?
did the factory reset thing. and erthang is up n running! thanks erbody for ur help.
Bricked mine Friday.
Couple of people here have same DX. I had of them charge my battery.
I flashed the wrong SBF.
I found the .340 SBF out there. Phone now working great.
Related
I cant believe this happened to my lovely Shift.
The plastic that separates the USB pins inside the USB port came off long time ago. I have been saying i will try re-attach it with some super-glue or something but delayed before doing so.
So the other day I was watching some football World Cup game on tv and decided to power up my Shift to check up something. I was totally unsighted. Guess what I ended up doing? You wont believe this but I ended up inserting the power pin into the USB port!!!!! And since the plastic was not there the power pin went in smoothly. As fate would have it the wall socket was already switched on.
As soon as I made the mistake I noticed and removed the power pin, straightened one of the usb middle pins that was bent inwards. Tried powering up the Shift but nothing doing. It wont come on; not even the winmo side. Tried switching on even with the battery alone but still nothing. In other words my Shift is as dead as dodo now.
So what did I damage? I understand that in the worst case scenario is a question of short-circuiting whereof I ended up doing a "12V Power In" instead of the usual usb "5V Power Out". If thats the case some serious barbecue went on inside the shift. But then it could just have been a simple case of shorting the usb pins without loading the 12v in. Either way something got burnt.
Anyone got any idea what I ended up frying inside my shift and whether ther is absolutely any hope of resurrection. I love the Shift and the thing was as good as new without any blemish at all......
Regards,
Ed
Sorry to hear about this sad news.
I'm no expert on 'cooking roms' but I can suggest the basics:
Have you tried removing the battery for a few minutes to flush any static from your shift? Give it 10 minutes in your case.
Is there any new smell? If so, you could possible open up your shift and follow the smell with your nose.
Do ANY of the lights flash? Did you leave HSDPA ebabled? does the HSDPA green light flash anymore after attempting power up?
Flanimal said:
Sorry to hear about this sad news.
I'm no expert on 'cooking roms' but I can suggest the basics:
Have you tried removing the battery for a few minutes to flush any static from your shift? Give it 10 minutes in your case.
Is there any new smell? If so, you could possible open up your shift and follow the smell with your nose.
Do ANY of the lights flash? Did you leave HSDPA ebabled? does the HSDPA green light flash anymore after attempting power up?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for the advice. I will remove the battery and keep it out for a while as suggested. There is no smell coming out of the shift. And all the led lights are off. They were onm before the accident. The only light that comes on is the one for charging the battery when i plug the wall charger in. No other lights come on when i try switching on.......
PlayStation said:
Thanks for the advice. I will remove the battery and keep it out for a while as suggested. There is no smell coming out of the shift. And all the led lights are off. They were onm before the accident. The only light that comes on is the one for charging the battery when i plug the wall charger in. No other lights come on when i try switching on.......
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just as a note, I had something similar happen to a notebook of mine several years ago, and I thought it was wasted. I removed the battery let it sit a few days because I was mad and thought it wouldnt work again anyway and 3 days later I plugged the battery back in and powered on and it worked.
Todays (and even yesterdays by the Shift's account) electronics are a lot more resiliant than people give them credit for.
I wish you the best, but I think youll be ok! PUT SOME TAPE ON THAT USB PORT in the mean time, dont make a mistake like that again, that way when you do get to fixing the port, you'll be ok!!
Best of luck.
Yes a few days without batteries or power could well discharge any static charges that are causing problems. If that fails, you could try connecting EARTH to the USB points to give your shift a flush from the same points where the unintended power went in.
I'll keep my fingers crossed for your Shift...
Thank you guys for your encouragement and prayers during this time of sorrow....
Sure I have taken out the battery will wait another day or 2 and report back any progress. Keep praying for us
So we all know the major problem with the WP7 roms.
You can not charge your phone when battery is completely drained!
Now here is the solotion. This requires no apps, no mods. Just your own handeling!
So what to do when battery depletes?
1. Plug your phone into a powersuply.
2. Turn on the phone and keep the power button and both volumes buttons pressed. (this is called a hard reset.)
How to hard reset HD2, view the first 17 seconds. Ignore the VolUp!.
3. You will receive an message saying:
''This operation will delete all your personal data, and reset all settings to manufacturer defailt. Press VolUp to restore manufacture default, or press other keys to cancel.''
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
4. Do not press anything. Let your phone be for a couple of minutes. I keep my phone laying for a minimum of 10 minutes.
You won't see the phone charging (no orange light in upper left corner)! Believe me it is!
5. After 10 minutes restart the phone. If ''press any other button to cancel'' does not work. Take out the battery, keep battery out for 5 seconds. Restart phone.
6. Phone will start. After windows phone loading screen you will see the phone is charging. If you kept it on power. If not, you didn't follow my instructions.
Tip: to avoid battery drainage!
When the phone is making the bleep noice warning for critical energy level, turn off the phone and keep it at a warm location. Ideal is to take out the battery and keep that to as warm as possible. Batterys barely drain when they are in warm enviorments.
I am not responsible to any damage done to the phone!
I done this multiple times, all times it worked fine for me!
If it helped, Thank me and leave a comment
when i'm on the road there is only one warm place i could think off, besides my armpits...
but your method works, have faced it once.
Thanks for the conformation.
To bad the HD2, is kinda big... doesnt sit that well.
magldr works as well
whats not clear is if the battery controler is in use with this method, so be warned, dont leave it too long, if you charge it for no more than an hour it will be ok
mains power adaptors usually give out 1Ah, take in to account that the screen is on full, this should give you around 700mA, more than enough to get in to windows to charge propperly
USB charge will be half that, most USB ports only give out 500mAh so an hour will give you approx 200mA again, thats enough to get you in to windows
Overcharging a battery can have some side effects, firstly is reversed polarity, meaning it wont take as much charge in the future, or it could heat up a lot, which isnt good for anything, the life of battery or the device its self.
dazza9075 said:
magldr works as well
whats not clear is if the battery controler is in use with this method, so be warned, dont leave it too long, if you charge it for no more than an hour it will be ok
mains power adaptors usually give out 1Ah, take in to account that the screen is on full, this should give you around 700mA, more than enough to get in to windows to charge propperly
USB charge will be half that, most USB ports only give out 500mAh so an hour will give you approx 200mA again, thats enough to get you in to windows
Overcharging a battery can have some side effects, firstly is reversed polarity, meaning it wont take as much charge in the future, or it could heat up a lot, which isnt good for anything, the life of battery or the device its self.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is true, but I recommend trying it for a minimum of 10 minutes keep it on charge. and as soon as windows pop on it recharges normally.
And didnt knew magldr did the job as well, the only problem is if you deplete it to badly it doesnt go past the HTC screen in the beginning.
all this is completely unnecessary.
easy fix solution:
1. Pull the battery out and USB cable out (if connected and charging)
2. Plug the USB into the phone and allow it to charge without a battery (it will not, duh!)
3. Put the battery in while the HD2's connected to the USB charging.
4. Observe that you can boot all the way back into WP7.
enjoy.
lemonspeakers said:
all this is completely unnecessary.
easy fix solution:
1. Pull the battery out and USB cable out (if connected and charging)
2. Plug the USB into the phone and allow it to charge without a battery (it will not, duh!)
3. Put the battery in while the HD2's connected to the USB charging.
4. Observe that you can boot all the way back into WP7.
enjoy.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I did not know that.
Well thank you. Although I am not such a big fan of taking out the battery when its not needed. I mean the change is short circuits with the connecting points when taking out, when powered or putting in when powered it larger. Now I heared from a comment above that MAGLRD does the trick as well. Now that is far more easier then all the others given above, Yours and mine
good tutorial on this. I cant believe the battery wont charge when dead thought this was a faulty error of the phone.
I flash boyppc rom v5 and my battery drained completely and now it doesnt start up I tried both methods available here. Please help.
faiz1120 said:
I flash boyppc rom v5 and my battery drained completely and now it doesnt start up I tried both methods available here. Please help.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
theres 3 methods on here,
bootloader charge
magldr charge
remove battery charge
all three will benifit frm heating up the battery, do not cook it, or it may blow up
there is a 4th way but i dont recomend it unless nothing else works
take a usb cable mini or usb printer cable
cut off the end connector
strip back the wires and seperate them all, you want the red and black ones
make sure all the wires cant touch each other, cover the 2 unused wires with tape i
then connect the black wire to the (-) negative and the red wire to the (+) positive
tape them in place
the 3rd contact point on the battery isnt used in this method
finally connect the other end of the usb cable to the computer
dont leave it too long and when disconnecting remove the computer end first
faiz1120 said:
I flash boyppc rom v5 and my battery drained completely and now it doesnt start up I tried both methods available here. Please help.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I recommend this one.
It bypasses the system somewhat. Don't know what happens when battery is entirely drained, but it is worth a try.
easy fix solution:
1. Pull the battery out and USB cable out (if connected and charging)
2. Plug the USB into the phone and allow it to charge without a battery (it will not, duh!)
3. Put the battery in while the HD2's connected to the USB charging.
4. Observe that you can boot all the way back into WP7.
enjoy.
If it does not help. You can buy a new battery.
Click Here. Its not that expensive, a official new battery from HTC is around 30$is around 20Euro's.
lemonspeakers said:
all this is completely unnecessary.
easy fix solution:
1. Pull the battery out and USB cable out (if connected and charging)
2. Plug the USB into the phone and allow it to charge without a battery (it will not, duh!)
3. Put the battery in while the HD2's connected to the USB charging.
4. Observe that you can boot all the way back into WP7.
enjoy.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for this timely post Lemonspeakers. completely drained the battery listening to music on loudspeaker and didnt hear any warning. Couldn't hard reset then checked this thread.
On putting in the battery after charging the empty phone, the screen kept cycling between mgldr and HTC splashscreen so booted into sd android and the phone is fine.
I assume I didnt charge the empty phone for long enough (30 secs), I didnt warm the battery and I suppose I could have left it cycling until it charged up a bit more.
Thanks again
Toasit said:
I recommend this one.
It bypasses the system somewhat. Don't know what happens when battery is entirely drained, but it is worth a try.
easy fix solution:
1. Pull the battery out and USB cable out (if connected and charging)
2. Plug the USB into the phone and allow it to charge without a battery (it will not, duh!)
3. Put the battery in while the HD2's connected to the USB charging.
4. Observe that you can boot all the way back into WP7.
enjoy.
If it does not help. You can buy a new battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i tried but my phone doesnt start even then. my friend said it might be a kernel. i wanna flash stock but i dont know how because my phone isnt starting
my hd2 is a tmous. the 1024 one
Robbie P said:
Thanks for this timely post Lemonspeakers. completely drained the battery listening to music on loudspeaker and didnt hear any warning. Couldn't hard reset then checked this thread.
On putting in the battery after charging the empty phone, the screen kept cycling between mgldr and HTC splashscreen so booted into sd android and the phone is fine.
I assume I didnt charge the empty phone for long enough (30 secs), I didnt warm the battery and I suppose I could have left it cycling until it charged up a bit more.
Thanks again
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
your phone was not starting either? like it was black even though you pressed hard reset? how long do i leave it the empty phone to charge??
I "charged" it for about 30 seconds, suppose you could do longer
Robbie P said:
I "charged" it for about 30 seconds, suppose you could do longer
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I left the phone without the battery and left it plugged in for 2 hrs and still no luck.
faiz1120 said:
I left the phone without the battery and left it plugged in for 2 hrs and still no luck.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This would be funny if it wasn't so serious.
Have you tried warming the battery? Hairdryer warm
Dont know if you have mgldr so maybe try the hard reset option
Robbie P said:
This would be funny if it wasn't so serious.
Have you tried warming the battery? Hairdryer warm
Dont know if you have mgldr so maybe try the hard reset option
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have magdlr but I can't even get it into hard reset. I can try the hairdryer warm the battery
faiz1120 said:
I have magdlr but I can't even get it into hard reset. I can try the hairdryer warm the battery
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That might work.
Otherwise maybe a phone repair shop, there is equipment that can charge your battery outside an phone. An emergency charger its called if I am not mistaken.
you could inform there.
its showing symtoms of it bring bricked. cause it doesnt charge, it doesnt turn on without the battery, and yeah conclusion is that its dead!
I need help. I messed up my Droid 2 restoring a backup and the battery died during SBF. So I did the Macgiver trick where you connect an old stripped usb wire to the battery so that the phone can be tricked into booting up and being flashed. Since then I've had a question mark in my battery icon. It wont read that battery or the battery that I've just purchased and I get the "Invalid Battery" message and the battery wont charge in the phone. Both batteries are official Motorola. I can't send the phone back as its not under warranty. So I have a few questions.
Is the some sort of workaround/ fix for this? Motorola put software on the Droid 2 since Froyo that reads whether or not a battery is official Motorola product. Can the battery software be hacked/ deleted so that I can use my battery as normal?
Wow, we have this same exact situation like a month ago, and since then my fiancee still uses her broken phone . We did the Macgyver trick also and we got the battery with the question mark. We even bought a new battery and it still shows it, tried reflashing with a fully charged battery and nothing changed. We also tried clearing battery stats none of it is working. If anyone knows anything about this problem please let us know. If you get an answer that cures your phone please please please let us know about it. I actually posted your question on Yahoo! Answers since it was the same exact problem that we had and if anyone answers we will post the reply on here.
Thanks a lot and good luck!
I've got the exact same problem. All I did was purchase one of those external chargers so that one battery is always charged. It is annoying, yes, but its not too bad. I'm also looking forward to see if there is a solution, but I doubt it. We probably all fried the contacts on the phone, but we'll see.
Sent from my DROID2 using XDA App
hey, yeah we did the same thing, we bought the second battery yesterday but i have a question, did you try flashing it again with the new battery in? I was wondering if it would work but i want to see if it will before clearing one more time my fiancee's cellphone since theres a fish game that may be lost if we do that.
Thanks a lot.
Brandon
I've SBF'd multiple times since then, and the question mark is still there. I don't think theres a way around it, unfortunately. Personally, it's not really a big deal, but it may be for you.
I just really hate it because I have no clue when my battery dies.
Never had the issue, but one thing comes to mind..why not root, install clockwork recovery and then clear the battery cache?
jediman said:
Never had the issue, but one thing comes to mind..why not root, install clockwork recovery and then clear the battery cache?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
They said they already tried that.
What exactly is this Macgiver trick? If you have a link, or some info on how it's I might be able to shed some light on this for you guys
The D2 battery is 3.7 volts; USB is 5. You probably blew out the A/D channel used to measure battery level.
Smartzkid said:
The D2 battery is 3.7 volts; USB is 5. You probably blew out the A/D channel used to measure battery level.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ah, I see so they're hooking up the USB straight to the phone...found it after a little searching...
But i'm curious, wouldn't that only happen if the wires ended up touching the other two terminals, and not just the outer (+) and (-) ones?
Will getting a new oem battery work?
No, replacing the battery will not work if you messed up when connecting the spliced USB charger + and - to the wrong terminals in the phone.
I have exactly same problem. I sliced the usb cable to revive my Droid X when the battery died during sbfing. Now my phone survived but Im stuck with question mark on battery icon. I flashed reflahsed and flashed again but no luck. wiped batt stat but no luck. Tried new OEM battery, no luck.. Put the batt in the freezer for 10min but no luck. I ran out of all the possible solution.
Now I just got the external stand along batt charger from ebay with 2 extra batts. I just carry extra battery since I dont know when the phone will go dead..
I would love to find out if someone can fix this issue. I still got 6 mo to go before I can upgrade.
I HAVE A SOLUTION (worked for me):
When doing the "Macgyver Hack", I jammed the USB wires into the battery. This pushed the metal spring terminals out. After that, the battery terminal springs don't all touch the connectors in the phone.
Take a needle, and carefully pull the battery's metal springs toward each other.
This worked for me.
Also, try this:
Remove battery and unplug phone. Plug phone in (without battery), then turn on (some phones will turn on without a battery). After the logo comes up, insert the battery. This made my phone recognize the battery and get into the OS.
Once the battery is recognized and you can boot to the OS, root the phone and get the battery calibration app (and use it).
I have a Motorola Defy, and used the Macgyver hack, then had the question mark problem for days before figuring this out.
jodaboda, Thank you a ton for that. I've been searching and trying out things to fix this and this is the closest I've come.
Although the Droid 2 doesn't boot up without a battery, I've had to the Macgyver Hack to get it to boot. The battery calibration app reads 100% charged when I am using the Macgyver Hack and is showing that the battery is charging. I'll tell you if it works once my battery is charged and I calibrate.
I wasn't able to get it to work. I think there is potential but my phone eventually died and it wasn't able to fix it. That app can measure the volts correctly tho, which means we should be able to get the battery working again somehow.
jodaboda said:
I HAVE A SOLUTION (worked for me):
When doing the "Macgyver Hack", I jammed the USB wires into the battery. This pushed the metal spring terminals out. After that, the battery terminal springs don't all touch the connectors in the phone.
Take a needle, and carefully pull the battery's metal springs toward each other.
This worked for me.
Also, try this:
Remove battery and unplug phone. Plug phone in (without battery), then turn on (some phones will turn on without a battery). After the logo comes up, insert the battery. This made my phone recognize the battery and get into the OS.
Once the battery is recognized and you can boot to the OS, root the phone and get the battery calibration app (and use it).
I have a Motorola Defy, and used the Macgyver hack, then had the question mark problem for days before figuring this out.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't have a nan back up from recovery but have read on another thread that you can also fix this by doing a restore of a back up through the recovery from a time before you have had the battery ? issue.. several people have also mentioned that it worked for them.. in my case I don't have a back up before this issue so I cannot confirm.
my phone died noooo
bumping in case anyone has a solution?
please. pretty please.
tried methods above, phone wont boot unless plugged in... i don't care i can't tell what % its at, but i do care it wont boot off battery power.
Tried 2 Ways with no Luck.
1. Power button + volume button down Long press less than a min. ?
2. Plug in for a day or more. ?
Gotto try jadaboda's tip.
Theheroitsme said:
Tried 2 Ways with no Luck.
1. Power button + volume button down Long press less than a min. ?
2. Plug in for a day or more. ?
Gotto try jadaboda's tip.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
try a fastboot cable or a spare battery charger
sd_shadow's [Collection] of Links for:
Droid 2 (a955)
Sent from my XT1254 using XDA Labs
Hello everyone,
I was going for a swim in the pool three days ago and have forgotten to put my Nexus 4 in my duffel bag. The phone was submerge along with my swimming short for over 30 seconds :crying:. I dried off the phone, opened it up to removed the battery, and dried it off with a hair blow dryer for five minutes continuously. Then I put my phone in a bowl of rice. Its been two days hoping that the moisture is gone, I plugged it to a wall charger and have gotten the "blinking red light of death". Next, I removed the battery and charge the phone with out it, giving me a boot loader screen with the green android and the Google logo. But putting the battery back and turning it on only giving me that annoying blinking red light. I hope all the phone component is still good. So at this stage can you guys tell me if the battery is dead and would purchasing a new battery resolve this issue? Any input to resolve this red blinking light would be helpful, thank you for reading.
This worked for me:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/nexus-4/general/final-fix-nexus-4-red-light-death-t2250454
tommyga said:
This worked for me:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/nexus-4/general/final-fix-nexus-4-red-light-death-t2250454
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have charge twice and installed the battery back and still get the blinking red light. As you have done this before, how did you go about doing it? Was the battery suppose to be "hot" when its being charge? Did you soldered the charging cable "hot and neutral" to the battery positive (+) negative (-) as shown in step 7?
dante510 said:
I have charge twice and installed the battery back and still get the blinking red light. As you have done this before, how did you go about doing it? Was the battery suppose to be "hot" when its being charge? Did you soldered the charging cable "hot and neutral" to the battery positive (+) negative (-) as shown in step 7?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm not sure the battery was hot during the process #7..
I took some old phone charger, cut the two wires apart (the positive and negative), and just made them touch the relevant spots on the battery (no soldering was made).
Did you wait more than 15 minutes during this charging?
tommyga said:
I'm not sure the battery was hot during the process #7..
I took some old phone charger, cut the two wires apart (the positive and negative), and just made them touch the relevant spots on the battery (no soldering was made).
Did you wait more than 15 minutes during this charging?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for your reply. I also used an old lg charge with the right amount of Voltage ouput. I think it was 5 Volt or something and just split the cable, made it touch the relevant spots and used it electrical tape to secure the the charging charging cable making sure that the wire made contact with the positive and negative spot. Im not sure which cable was positive or negative, so I had to swap cable around and recharge every 15 minutes trial. I know my connection looks messy but thats the best i could do to make sure the make contact at the charging point on the battery. Is this how you do it? lol
[/ATTACH][/ATTACH][/ATTACH]
Basically it seems fine.
There are two more things I recommend trying:
1. Try charging it for 30 minutes.
2. When plugging the battery back, just plug it, and don't screw the two screws of the battery.
Try these two things - and keep updating if the red light still shows
tommyga said:
Basically it seems fine.
There are two more things I recommend trying:
1. Try charging it for 30 minutes.
2. When plugging the battery back, just plug it, and don't screw the two screws of the battery.
Try these two things - and keep updating if the red light still shows
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have tried charging twice with 30 minutes cycle on each attempt, and have installed the battery back to the phone without the screw of the battery. I tried turning the phone on by holding down the power button for 10 seconds, but there was no Google logo splash screen. The same thing happen on my second attempt, no Google or boot-loader screen. I plugged in the wall charger and let it sit for over two hour and still cant turn it on, only the blinking red light. Removing the battery, charging directly from the cable, and holding the power volume button down at the same time gave me a boot-loader screen and Google logo but the phone immediately shut off. Any ideas what else I could try? Could you tell me about where my phone is damage base on the picture from my earlier post?
If you see Google's logo, your phone can run fine. The problem is probably the dead battery. Consider replacing it with a new one.
sky0165 said:
If you see Google's logo, your phone can run fine. The problem is probably the dead battery. Consider replacing it with a new one.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks i just order a new one yesterday, just thought I give it a shot instead of buying a new phone. Lets hope its as you say. Thanks for your input.
Ordered a new battery, and it booted up fine. The important thing is that the blinking red light of death is gone so far.. thank goodness! Looks like the battery shorted out when my phone was submerge in the water. There is one small yellow streak line on the bottom right of the screen now but I can live with that. Glad nothing else is damage Thank you for all of your help! Cheers!
Hi there,
a few days ago I bought a second hand nexus 4 from ebay. (had very good experience with my second hand N9 that I am using right now) The description said it wouldn't start after a android update. So I thought, no big deal, just flash a new OS and everything will be fine. But as it turns out it seems to be a hardware problem. Plugging in the charger results in a red blinking light. When I hold down -vol + power and then plug in the cable I get to the bootloader (or fastboot, not sure how its called) but neither "start" or recovery mode works. When I do the same with the usb cable attached to my pc (desktop, so should provide enough power) most of the time phone turns off half a second after reaching the bootloader. Only randomly it seems to work. I managed to unlock the bootloader and flash the default rom again (took me like a 100 tries) but it does not change anything. I charged the phone on the wall the whole night, still no change. I have seen some posts suggesting to open the phone and unplug the battery, but unfortunately I don't own such a tiny screw driver. Is there anything I can do? Or did I just spend 70€ on a completely broken phone? =/
nobody? really?
is there nothing left I can try?
Jean_Luc said:
I have seen some posts suggesting to open the phone and unplug the battery, but unfortunately I don't own such a tiny screw driver. Is there anything I can do?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Buy the tiny screwdriver. Better yet, buy one of those disassembly kits off eBay that has the T5 TORX, a small Phillips, and the plastic tools for prying things apart. They're only a few bucks (or quid, or whatever).
After opening the case and disconnecting and then connection the battery again the phone at least charges (white battery symbol while charging) and boots into android. But the upper part of the phone - I guess thats where the SoC is - get super hot really fast. At some point the phone resets, probably because of the heat. Is there something that can be done?