Yes I know you can easily root it with kingroot, Though I wish it to not reset after restart
Anyone please?
Related
I have a sprint tab i used SuperOneClick to root it but after i reboot its unrooted . anyone else have this happen? And even when rooted the system folder is write only please help or i may need to take this thing back
Works great for my DX, however, I need to un-root it and I've tried several ways from other forums and I am not having any luck.
Does anyone know the procedure to un-root for GingerBreak?
I don't have Gingerbread installed either, I'm just running 2.2.1 - I don't know if this makes a difference when trying to un-root this. If anyone could help me out I would appreciate it. I've been scouring trying to find a solution and I've had no luck yet. I've tried rooting then unrooting when the one-click program and that isn't helping me either. Any suggestions??
(If you're wondering I have no idea why I chose this way to root especially since I didn't have Gingerbread installed)
if you cant find a different way, doing an sbf and a factory reset will take you back to stock, unrooted, out of the box state.
If you install z4root, it should detect that you are rooted and give you the option to unroot. Have you tried that? And jw, why do you want to unroot?
Jmoney47 said:
If you install z4root, it should detect that you are rooted and give you the option to unroot. Have you tried that? And jw, why do you want to unroot?
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Click to collapse
z4root uses a different exploit then gingerbreak, so it will not be able to undo it.
I am about to use the KFU to root and wanted to know which option I should choose. Temporary root or permanent root. what is the difference?
babbabooey97 said:
I am about to use the KFU to root and wanted to know which option I should choose. Temporary root or permanent root. what is the difference?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Temp root gives you all the benefits of rooting until you power off the system (I believe.) If you are not sure if you want to root, temp rooting is a good way to check out what it's like to be rooted.
Permanent rooting is exactly what it says. It roots the Fire and will stay that way until you decide to unroot it, or if Amazon pushes another update that breaks root.
I have had root before but i went back to full stock and now when i try to root i get a success on iroot but when i try doing anything that requires a root on the phone it wont let me! What can i do to fix this issue?
GhostSoldier_US said:
I have had root before but i went back to full stock and now when i try to root i get a success on iroot but when i try doing anything that requires a root on the phone it wont let me! What can i do to fix this issue?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Try installing supersu from playstore and root checker to...check
All I want to do is root this thing, but no matter what I've tried it just doesn't want to work. Has anyone actually managed to root this?
Cant be done.... Yet
KSeto0229 said:
All I want to do is root this thing, but no matter what I've tried it just doesn't want to work. Has anyone actually managed to root this?
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Click to collapse
hi, i've try but nothing, i use kingo, frame, tow, and others but nothing.. some user say they have been able to root this by some kind of mistake, they use kingo with no success but then reboot and done, is rooted, it says is not but it is but not with me jeje, i guess we'll have to wait.
Rooting Blu Studio C 5+5 LTE
KSeto0229 said:
All I want to do is root this thing, but no matter what I've tried it just doesn't want to work. Has anyone actually managed to root this?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've done it. I used the newest version of Kingroot from the Google Playstore (ver 4.8 at the time of this writing) If I recall correctly I *think* Kingroot may have shown an issue getting root access. However, after rebooting the device the rooting process did work. I was able to verify it by using root checker (basic version). After I had root I replaced Kingroot with SuperSU and once again verified using root checker. Still rooted... Be careful to take one step at a time. If you can reply with specifics and what order you did them in I might be able to help.
Root
jtpiano said:
I've done it. I used the newest version of Kingroot from the Google Playstore (ver 4.8 at the time of this writing) If I recall correctly I *think* Kingroot may have shown an issue getting root access. However, after rebooting the device the rooting process did work. I was able to verify it by using root checker (basic version). After I had root I replaced Kingroot with SuperSU and once again verified using root checker. Still rooted... Be careful to take one step at a time. If you can reply with specifics and what order you did them in I might be able to help.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
use Kingroot 3.5