Keep switching off pernamently. - Acer Iconia A700 and A510

HI
I have problem with my A700.
Its keep switching off after about 1min.
Then is not possible to turn on! I turn on only when I reset with paper clip. Battery are charged at 91%.
Any help?
ps. Tablet is out of standard warranty, but in end of December 2013 beck from acer repair center with new mainboard - so I wonder whether the guarantee should not be extended?

Related

[Q] Fix for battery indicator showing question mark?

Hello all,
I'm stumped. My rooted Xoom has been working fine, kicking butt since the WiFi launch day. However, I'm running into a very odd problem with my battery. It's not being detected. The battery indicator on the bottom right has a question mark on it. The only way I can power on the Xoom and keep it powered on is by keeping it connected to the power adapter.
I did a little Googling and found that some have resolved the issue by using the charging dock from Moto. I just received it and no luck! Anyone have any ideas or have had the same issue? Any help is appreciated as my Xoom has become an Android 3.1 desktop!
bumping one time
When did it start happening? Ever drop your xoom? Get it wet in any way?
It just started last week. No drops, no possible water damage. It's always in a leather case. I'm starting to believe it's a faulty battery.
It does sound like a hardware issue.
Good luck...Ihope you can get it repaired or replaced.
Thanks for the replies! I was able to go on the Motorola support site and they will be sending me a box to ship the Xoom back for free repair. I noted two issues: device doesn't turn on and battery doesn't charge.
Guess I have a "used" dock to sell now.
having the same issue... my xoom only works with it on the charger... battery wont charge... have "?" on the battery indicator
wtf?
Don't sell your dock... they come in handy.
These things do happen. another tablet of mine that's only six months old suffered a battery failure and had to be replaced. I don't think it happens often.
went to best buy and exchanged my xoom, now everything is fine lol
And they didn't ask any questions, I was in and out in 20 mins with my new xoom.
Thanks for the great warranty Motorola.

[Q] Replacement Battery For Elocity A7

I have an Elocity A7 that I began experiencing issues with. The screen won't boot up although the power light will come on. I took it to a repair shop and they advised me that the battery will not hold a charge and needs to be replaced. Does anyone know where a replacement battery can be purchased? I did contact Elocity support but thought I would check on here as well. Thanks!

[Q] Phone powers off and doesn't come back on..

weird issue in that for the past two days the phone will not power on. I can hit the power button which "does not appear to be stuck" and it will briefly turn on getting to 1st splash screen before going black and not coming back on. Can't get into anything. While ago messing with it I had it fully boot but when the screen timed out I hit the power button any it wasn't on anymore. I even got it to turn on for the drive home for about an hr and was able to listen to pandora. I have unlimited data so I didn't want to get a new phone. So I looked online and saw someone had a brand new s4 for 320.00 bucks.. which I think I can keep my data if I buy a phone elsewhere correct? I also looked at replacing the motherboard for my s3 which was 90 bucks. Need some assistance either making my s3 work or ideas of what phone to get under 300.00
also.. When I plug it in while it is off it doesn't appear to be charging.. Maybe it is the battery? Maybe it is the charging port?
I think you should try another battery first. However, I do have some questions. Is you charging port loose on your phone? Is your phone still under warranty through your carrier? I recently had issues with my S3 draining really bad. I'd plug it into the charger and it would definitely act like it was charging up but in all reality the battery was draining like a sieve. I called Verizon Wireless and ended up getting a new phone as a warranty replacement. It's working fine now. *knock on wood*
Cindy
Sent from my Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 8" model using Tapatalk
the light doesn't come on when charging like before. the port is not loose. I took the phone apart to see if there was something damaged or loose inside and everything seemed fine. I doubt the phone is under warranty. I just purchased a new battery for 16 bucks.. hope it works. I will update this thread on thursday once I get the battery in.
Sounds similar to what I ran into with my charging port going bad, currently it will only work with the stock charging cable but I have purchased a wireless charging battery cover and use that for 90% of my charging.
brandoncampbell said:
weird issue in that for the past two days the phone will not power on. I can hit the power button which "does not appear to be stuck" and it will briefly turn on getting to 1st splash screen before going black and not coming back on. Can't get into anything. While ago messing with it I had it fully boot but when the screen timed out I hit the power button any it wasn't on anymore. I even got it to turn on for the drive home for about an hr and was able to listen to pandora. I have unlimited data so I didn't want to get a new phone. So I looked online and saw someone had a brand new s4 for 320.00 bucks.. which I think I can keep my data if I buy a phone elsewhere correct? I also looked at replacing the motherboard for my s3 which was 90 bucks. Need some assistance either making my s3 work or ideas of what phone to get under 300.00
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That sucks...
---------- Post added at 12:56 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:54 PM ----------
brandoncampbell said:
weird issue in that for the past two days the phone will not power on. I can hit the power button which "does not appear to be stuck" and it will briefly turn on getting to 1st splash screen before going black and not coming back on. Can't get into anything. While ago messing with it I had it fully boot but when the screen timed out I hit the power button any it wasn't on anymore. I even got it to turn on for the drive home for about an hr and was able to listen to pandora. I have unlimited data so I didn't want to get a new phone. So I looked online and saw someone had a brand new s4 for 320.00 bucks.. which I think I can keep my data if I buy a phone elsewhere correct? I also looked at replacing the motherboard for my s3 which was 90 bucks. Need some assistance either making my s3 work or ideas of what phone to get under 300.00
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you are gonna get an S4, make absolutely SURE it is an MDK build!! Anything after that has a locked bootloader! Ah hem...mine is MDK and comes with a mophie case...and glass screen protector... just saying.
the battery didn't fix the problem. I guess I will have to replace the motherboard. I bought the s4 today for 275. but as caleb stated it is locked.. oh well.. I think I can still root it. I am hoping I can replace the board no problems and atleast sell this thing for 175. Anyone have much luck with these boards? http://www.ebay.com/itm/OEM-Samsung...05&prg=10335&rk=1&rkt=6&sd=271467013367&rt=nc
I am googling this problem for a friend with a stock verizon S3 - there are TONS of people who can't charge once they're on KitKat. Is that the case with you? It seems to be a software, not hardware, issue.
From the sounds of things, don't expect a new board to fix it.
Nope. I never updated.
Also, the charging part is not the only problem. I had a full battery but couldn't get the phone to stay on. Eventually I couldn't even turn it on at all. Just died.

Boot Loop of Death Encountered (Hardware Failure)

tl;dr: My chronology of the infamous LG V10 boot loop death which got repaired under LG's unannounced extended 15 months warranty. Important lesson learned is make sure to back up all the phone's valuable data (even though I technically didn't lose anything critical).
01/03/2017: I finally experienced the infamous boot loop of death with my AT&T LG V10 yesterday (01/02/2017). The boot loop I encounter isn't due to flashing gone bad or wrong, but due to regular use. My phone wasn't excessively overheating at the time, but I do know that the metallic ring around the power/finger print sensor was warm due to surfing the internet at the time on Chrome. I do have a tempered glass on the phone and a slim translucent plastic cover to protect my phone. What happened was that my phone suddenly just powered off the display screen. I thought the phone just experienced a force close and forced reboot, not that I ever experienced one with the V10, but other Android phones before (i.e., very old ass Android phones). But I waited for the phone to boot up, but it never did. I tried to reboot the phone and then that's when it got to the home screen and locked up. Ever since then, reboots failed to get pass the AT&T logo, but could pass the LG logo.
I've already tried the refrigerator/freezer trick to cool down the phone, but it appears that I'm passed that stage where the phone would not boot pass the LG logo or AT&T logo. The more I tried to get the phone to boot up, the more it will just stall or reset at the LG logo, or refuse to boot up (i.e., speed up its death). Even the charging screen once showed, no longer reaches the charging stage where it shows the percentage of the battery's power remaining through the wall charger or being plugged into a computer laptop. Pulling the battery and letting the phone sit idle (to cool down the internal circuits?) for a while will allow it to come back to life with the boot loop problem or the ability to charge the battery via a computer's USB port. I tried charging with the wall adapter, but that forces the phone to boot up, and render the phone useless thereafter, so I elected to charge the phone via computer.
My AT&T LG V10 (H900 variant) is on Android 6.0 (H90021w00). It's not rooted anymore due to upgrading to Android 6.0 (I updated back in November 2016 here) without issue and wasn't abused (e.g., phone dropped, water damage) for it to cause the boot loop of death. The hardware version (H/W) is 1.0 with the SKU 6084A. Battery manufacturing date appears to be 2015.11.07 (D). The OEM package boxing has DHHS Code MC1, manufactured date of 12/2015 and made in Korea.
I wanted to try and save some data off of my phone, but the phone couldn't stay on life support long enough. Of course, fastboot won't allow me to save data (it's design is to write data only). I did manage to put the phone into download mode (i.e., phone powered off, hold down volume button and plug in USB cable from computer) one time and try to flash an upgrade of Android 6.0 firmware H90021w00 with LG Up, but it failed somewhere after 10%.
Good thing I have Google Photos backing up all my photos and videos, and nothing critical resides on my phone other than auto logins. I'll just have to change all my passwords soon enough if my phone has to be taken away for warranty. I wanted to at least save data and do a data wipe to make sure that nothing falls into the wrong hands. But I now can't do any of the two. I called the nearest AT&T corporate store, but was directed to one that has a warranty center. I will be on my way to an AT&T corporate store later tonight that has a warranty center. Just doing so to avoid traffic. I know my phone has the usual 1 year warranty, and speaking to the AT&T corporate store with the warranty center, I was told that I have at least 80 something days left of warranty. So good thing I'm not screwed and can at least get a replacement phone.
Currently the phone is sitting on my desk charging at a slow ass rate and up from fluctuating anywhere between 12% and 21% to a now whopping 30% power capacity. I want to at least demonstrate the boot looping to AT&T personnel and it's not due to physical damage or water damage. I'll report back what's happening with my situation so that way, anybody else who experienced this situation will have something to go by.
Update 01/04/2017: I read through the freezer trick thoroughly this time and the entire thread. I decided to try it again, but this time, I left the phone in the freezer for a short time (half an hour or so) without the battery. After time elapsed in the freezer to cool down the phone, I plugged in the USB to the phone while having my laptop near the refrigerator with LG Bridge loaded and ready to back up, and then put in the battery. Lo and behold, the phone did manage to boot up all the way to the lock screen, due to various sound cues from the phone (AT&T logo) and USB connectivity (from Windows 7). However, when I tried to unlock the phone, that's when it froze and rebooted. After that, it hit the boot loop and won't get as far as the initial try. So I'll keep trying to revive my phone long enough to get some data off of it and wipe it clean. I still have time with warranty, so I'm in no hurry. Besides, I attempted warranty processing last night and missed the opening as the warranty department closed early.
Update 01/11/2017: I managed to get my LG V10 phone to boot up further than the freezer trick by utilizing the hair dryer trick here. Basically, what the video shows is that one must take a hair dryer, blow dry on the highest heat setting to the bottom of the backside phone up to the point where the phone gets hot, without the battery for over a minute. After that, put in the battery, boot up the phone and blow dry the bottom of the phone and heat it up even further while it's booting. I had to repeat the hair dryer heating process many times in order to stabilize my phone because it would reboot within minutes after I try to initially back up with LG Bridge's LG Backup tool. I did manage to overheat the bottom part of the phone so much that Android denied charging the battery via USB connected to the computer. Further exacerbating the problem was that the battery was so hot, LG Bridge denied backup because it thought the battery charge status was under 30% when in fact, my LG V10 showed at 49%. I did get the most important file that I was after on my phone after many tries (kept rebooting on me), but I'll persist to back up the entire phone in case I needed something else before turning this phone over to AT&T warranty service.
Update 1/19/2017: As much as I tried to back up my LG V10 and wipe afterwards, my attempts were futile. The phone couldn't stabilize enough after reaching the home screen, and would reboot shortly thereafter. At least I got what I've wanted. When I kept trying to revive it with the hair dryer trick, it just wouldn't go pass the boot screen most of the time (i.e., LG logo or AT&T logo). It even got to the point where it would turn on slowly (i.e., there's a delay booting up when power was pressed on). So at this point, it appears that the boot loop of death is sinking in further into my LG V10. I also tried the freezer trick again and then going back to the hair dryer trick when the freezer trick stopped working, although not back to back, otherwise that would provide temperature shock to the components. The freezer trick did manage to get further, but it only happened twice where it got to the home screen and then rebooted. Note to those wondering if condensation would trip or activate the moisture sensors on the phone and the battery, it does not when you take careful steps of taking the phone out of the freezer and putting it into the refrigerator and then take it out, letting maybe 10 minutes pass by for each step of temperature transition so that the phone's temperature can get to room temperature without condensation buildup.
Anyways, I decided that I've spent way too much of my time trying to revive my phone to back up data that most likely I wouldn't need. I went the route of sending my phone to LG for repair instead of going to AT&T store and receiving a refurbished LG V10. I'd rather have my phone repaired by LG and receive my phone back with the repaired hardware than to receive someone else's LG V10. I based my decision on this thread here over at Android Central where someone sent in their phone for repair, got theirs back with a clean start (i.e., don't expect LG to either back up your data or reuse your memory storage as no personal data was saved). It is good to note that LG has extended LG V10 warranty of 1 year (12 months) to 15 months. I'm pretty sure LG granted a 3 month warranty extension on LG V10s due to the boot loop issue. I didn't realize I got the extension until thinking back, when I called AT&T warranty center, they told me I had about 86 days of warranty left, which is about 3 months extended from my 1 year of warranty when it ended. The phone was bubble wrapped (removed back cover, battery, SIM, microSD) and shipped off in a small box that I re-used from another item that was shipped to me. Shipping carrier is by FedEx Ground that was paid for by LG, being shipped to LG's repair center in Texas.
Update 01/24/2017: The phone has arrived at the Texas facility yesterday (Monday) according to FedEx, but the status of my repair hasn't been updated anymore than giving me estimated delivery date of 9 days. What's odd is that LG didn't update the received date at repair facility field and have deleted my FedEx tracking number.
Update 01/25/2017: LG updated the repair status last night which pretty much acknowledged item received, diagnosed, repaired, and prepared for shipment back to customer. The repair was "Swap Board (Main/RF) : Others". I should have the phone back on 01/28/2017 and will update then accordingly. It appears that LG probably replaced the entire mother board which would include the 64 GB of memory holding user data, among others. Considering that others have reported of receiving a freshly formatted phone, I would expect the same once the phone reaches back to me. I would highly doubt LG went the extra length to migrate data off of the failing motherboard onto the new one. It would be nice if they did.
Update 01/28/2017: I have received my phone today via FedEx Ground shipping, and they delivered on a Saturday. The status of my phone was factory reset. I can tell it was factory reset because I still have the unlimited tethering (hotspot) enabled from the previous rooting (Lollipop) and then went to Marshmallow and losing the root, but still have unlimited tethering. Also, Android OS is updated to H90021x (from the previous H90021w00), build number MRA58K, with Android security patch level 2016-11-01. You will need to set up the phone just like you did the first time. They also removed my tempered glass and left a narrow sticky film that doesn't cover the entire front screen glass that can be peeled off. Good thing I have an extra tempered glass for the V10. The phone came back with the same serial # and ESN/IMEI that I've sent to LG. If you're like me trying to migrate data from one LG phone to another, it's best to use the LG Backup in Backup & Reset under Settings that's found native in the phone. LG PC Suite and LG Bridge won't work with Verizon's LG G4 (VS986) on Windows 7 for me, no matter what I did (installed many LG G4 drivers, including Verizon's). Some backup apps, such as LG Backup (Sender) and Super Backup & Restore do not back up everything, neither does the native backup LG Backup in the Android Settings menu.
Update 02/03/2017: What appears to be a puzzling action on my repaired LG V10 is that I'm going to take no chance and back up my phone in case I end up losing data again. What happened earlier was that I was surfing the Internet with Chrome, reading up on a news article, when I was prompted to Miracast and enter a PIN. WTF? I ignored it a few times and then it got to the point where my phone was unresponsive with the Miracast prompts, but I was able to force my phone to reboot. Upon reboot, I noticed that the phone loading up was sluggish and not typically responsive. I decided to shutdown my phone to prevent further irreversible problem in the future (hint: boot loop). I waited for my phone to cool down for perhaps a few minutes before I powered on the phone again. This time, when the phone booted up, it was responsive as it normally has. Before all this happened, I didn't use my phone excessively nor extensive in a short period of time. I really have doubts that LG really applied a fix to their faulty connection problem and just used a replacement just to pass by.
Update 02/04/2017: I received an e-mail from LG requesting my feedback with respect to the repair. I gladly answered the survey, gave them good credit with respect to the repair itself, but when it comes to the quality of the LG product, they took a hit and I expressed my concern with respect to the boot loop.
These bootloops have been happening quite a lot lately. Makes me worried.
Affangta said:
These bootloops have been happening quite a lot lately. Makes me worried.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I would suggest that anybody with a functioning LG V10 to do their due diligence and back up their data on the phone in case there's a catastrophic event such as the boot loop I've experienced. At least I have most of my data backed up. Just some that I disabled but now realize it's worth having.
It happened to me too on Nov 2016. I have been told to return the phone to AT&T and get a replacement phone under warranty. I did receive a replacement V10. Now AT&T pissed me off on changing the phone contact expiry date to next year. I am on AT&T Next 12 plan. I am supposed to get a new phone on January 2017, but now I have to wait till 2018. Next time, I am buying phone myself.
anand_pv said:
It happened to me too on Nov 2016. I have been told to return the phone to AT&T and get a replacement phone under warranty. I did receive a replacement V10. Now AT&T pissed me off on changing the phone contact expiry date to next year. I am on AT&T Next 12 plan. I am supposed to get a new phone on January 2017, but now I have to wait till 2018. Next time, I am buying phone myself.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
A replacement phone under warranty should not extend your contract. Did you contest the contract extension? Under the warranty exchange, there's no mention of contract extension required: https://www.att.com/esupport/article.html#!/wireless/KM1044996
Its kind of best to buy the phone out right.
On AT&T Next. What ever payment plan you choose, you dont get to keep the phone until it is completely "paid off". Which pushing through the confuseing payments costs as well as additional costs, in reality your technically paying more then the phone sells for. So if you intend on keeping your next phone. Just go out and buy an unlocked version. Or get an unlocked international version.
Try baking it?
My wife's v10 started bootlooping about a week ago and is out of warranty. This happened right after doing a FOTA security update. I figured it was due to that so I tried resetting the phone but could not boot in to anything to get it to reset. After extensive searching and reading, I have "fixed" the phone so far. It has been booted up and running for almost 2 full days now. We are not using it at the moment, we had a spare phone so its not like we were going to be out of anything. Instead of the freezer trick (was not worried about data backup), I did the baking trick and as surprised as I was...it worked! Here is what I did if it might help anyone else.
Please note that your warranty will really be void after doing this, especially if anything gets damaged. The information here is reference only and results may vary due to altitude and baking temps (thought I would NEVER put that in a disclaimer for gadgets and software, lol). You may or may not have data loss either, so do not blame me!
You will need to take the phone apart so you will need a small precision set of screwdrivers. Check out the video from the link below to see how to disassemble the phone, you only need to get to the part where the circuit board is removed.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7N_mGT-P1ZA
And now...seriously,
1. Pre-heat your oven to 385 F (~195 C).
2. CAREFULLY take the circuit board out of the phone, use the video above as reference.
3. Place the circuit board in the oven and bake for 7 minutes. I set my board on a baking rack so it was not directly on a cookie sheet.
4. Take circuit board out, shut off oven and let sit for at least 20 minutes to fully cool down. Add salt for flavor? (j/k)
5. After cool down, CAREFULLY place circuit board back in and put phone back together.
6. Put battery in and let charge if needed before booting the phone up.
7. Cross fingers and turn the phone on!
We were at a point to where we did not want to file a claim if we were going to end up with the same phone possibly again and have issues so I figured I would try it out. My kids thought I was insane watching me bake a circuit board.
However, the electronics knowledge in me knows this is just enough to actually do solder reflow on the board. From the numerous posts that I have read, it appears that some of the soldering is faulty and sometimes a reflow will fix the issue. Since circuit boards are so small and intricate, it takes extremely serious skill to actually use a solder iron to fix those...so for those of us who are not extremely seriously skilled in soldering, the oven seems to work. Don't get me wrong, I can solder like no tomorrow...but not on circuit boards
So if you have nothing to lose...give this a shot!
I had the same problem, I'm unsecured so I take a repair where a technician and told the hay processor to re-weld it because it got off the board.
Ten days ago, during an ordinary work morning, and without warning, my V10 entered the boot loop spiral of death. The unprompted reboots became more frequent, moving backwards from home screen, to AT&T screen, to LG screen, from where the phone eventually refused to proceed. I bought the phone during the first week of U.S availability in October 2015, so it's past warranty, of course.
I submitted a ticket at the LG website, and shipped my comatose V10 via FedEx an exact 27 miles across the DFW metroplex to the LG Service Center near Alliance Airport north of Fort Worth. The package arrived there the next day thanks to close proximity to local ground service, rather than making a fun trip to Memphis and back.
My V10 returned yesterday. I paid $72 + tax for out-of-warranty replacement of the main logic board, which we surely suspect to have failed because of the well-known factory defect that appears to have affected the V10, G4, and even the G3. $72 is still a fair price for this type of repair on a large premium smartphone. My software and settings were easy to restore after my having number moved back from my wife's old G2 to a new SIM.
Will it last? I hope so.
Your are genius, so does your kid will grow up the same way...
Hi John!
I register this forum just for the purpose saying " Thank You! You are genius"
I followed your step by step guide and brought up my LG V10 to life, which casued by the so called " boot loop" problem few days ago.
I was almost ready to send my V10 back to the LG, and requesting for the replacemnt of the internal board of my LG V10. Luckily, I read your thread, and presume that your assumption is right with logical analysis. Now my phone is working without boot problem, and I successfully bring back my data from the internal memory, too.
Thank you so much, John!
eddie.
johnkirchner said:
My wife's v10 started bootlooping about a week ago and is out of warranty. This happened right after doing a FOTA security update. I figured it was due to that so I tried resetting the phone but could not boot in to anything to get it to reset. After extensive searching and reading, I have "fixed" the phone so far. It has been booted up and running for almost 2 full days now. We are not using it at the moment, we had a spare phone so its not like we were going to be out of anything. Instead of the freezer trick (was not worried about data backup), I did the baking trick and as surprised as I was...it worked! Here is what I did if it might help anyone else.
Please note that your warranty will really be void after doing this, especially if anything gets damaged. The information here is reference only and results may vary due to altitude and baking temps (thought I would NEVER put that in a disclaimer for gadgets and software, lol). You may or may not have data loss either, so do not blame me!
And now...seriously,
1. Pre-heat your oven to 385 F (~195 C).
2. CAREFULLY take the circuit board out of the phone, use the video above as reference.
3. Place the circuit board in the oven and bake for 7 minutes. I set my board on a baking rack so it was not directly on a cookie sheet.
4. Take circuit board out, shut off oven and let sit for at least 20 minutes to fully cool down. Add salt for flavor? (j/k)
5. After cool down, CAREFULLY place circuit board back in and put phone back together.
6. Put battery in and let charge if needed before booting the phone up.
7. Cross fingers and turn the phone on!
We were at a point to where we did not want to file a claim if we were going to end up with the same phone possibly again and have issues so I figured I would try it out. My kids thought I was insane watching me bake a circuit board.
However, the electronics knowledge in me knows this is just enough to actually do solder reflow on the board. From the numerous posts that I have read, it appears that some of the soldering is faulty and sometimes a reflow will fix the issue. Since circuit boards are so small and intricate, it takes extremely serious skill to actually use a solder iron to fix those...so for those of us who are not extremely seriously skilled in soldering, the oven seems to work. Don't get me wrong, I can solder like no tomorrow...but not on circuit boards
So if you have nothing to lose...give this a shot!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
hoang51 said:
tl;dr: My chronology of the infamous LG V10 boot loop death which got repaired under LG's unannounced extended 15 months warranty. Important lesson learned is make sure to back up all the phone's valuable data (even though I technically didn't lose anything critical).
01/03/2017: I finally experienced the infamous boot loop of death with my AT&T LG V10 yesterday (01/02/2017). The boot loop I encounter isn't due to flashing gone bad or wrong, but due to regular use. My phone wasn't excessively overheating at the time, but I do know that the metallic ring around the power/finger print sensor was warm due to surfing the internet at the time on Chrome. I do have a tempered glass on the phone and a slim translucent plastic cover to protect my phone. What happened was that my phone suddenly just powered off the display screen. I thought the phone just experienced a force close and forced reboot, not that I ever experienced one with the V10, but other Android phones before (i.e., very old ass Android phones). But I waited for the phone to boot up, but it never did. I tried to reboot the phone and then that's when it got to the home screen and locked up. Ever since then, reboots failed to get pass the AT&T logo, but could pass the LG logo.
I've already tried the refrigerator/freezer trick to cool down the phone, but it appears that I'm passed that stage where the phone would not boot pass the LG logo or AT&T logo. The more I tried to get the phone to boot up, the more it will just stall or reset at the LG logo, or refuse to boot up (i.e., speed up its death). Even the charging screen once showed, no longer reaches the charging stage where it shows the percentage of the battery's power remaining through the wall charger or being plugged into a computer laptop. Pulling the battery and letting the phone sit idle (to cool down the internal circuits?) for a while will allow it to come back to life with the boot loop problem or the ability to charge the battery via a computer's USB port. I tried charging with the wall adapter, but that forces the phone to boot up, and render the phone useless thereafter, so I elected to charge the phone via computer.
My AT&T LG V10 (H900 variant) is on Android 6.0 (H90021w00). It's not rooted anymore due to upgrading to Android 6.0 (I updated back in November 2016 here) without issue and wasn't abused (e.g., phone dropped, water damage) for it to cause the boot loop of death. The hardware version (H/W) is 1.0 with the SKU 6084A. Battery manufacturing date appears to be 2015.11.07 (D). The OEM package boxing has DHHS Code MC1, manufactured date of 12/2015 and made in Korea.
I wanted to try and save some data off of my phone, but the phone couldn't stay on life support long enough. Of course, fastboot won't allow me to save data (it's design is to write data only). I did manage to put the phone into download mode (i.e., phone powered off, hold down volume button and plug in USB cable from computer) one time and try to flash an upgrade of Android 6.0 firmware H90021w00 with LG Up, but it failed somewhere after 10%.
Good thing I have Google Photos backing up all my photos and videos, and nothing critical resides on my phone other than auto logins. I'll just have to change all my passwords soon enough if my phone has to be taken away for warranty. I wanted to at least save data and do a data wipe to make sure that nothing falls into the wrong hands. But I now can't do any of the two. I called the nearest AT&T corporate store, but was directed to one that has a warranty center. I will be on my way to an AT&T corporate store later tonight that has a warranty center. Just doing so to avoid traffic. I know my phone has the usual 1 year warranty, and speaking to the AT&T corporate store with the warranty center, I was told that I have at least 80 something days left of warranty. So good thing I'm not screwed and can at least get a replacement phone.
Currently the phone is sitting on my desk charging at a slow ass rate and up from fluctuating anywhere between 12% and 21% to a now whopping 30% power capacity. I want to at least demonstrate the boot looping to AT&T personnel and it's not due to physical damage or water damage. I'll report back what's happening with my situation so that way, anybody else who experienced this situation will have something to go by.
Update 01/04/2017: I read through the freezer trick thoroughly this time and the entire thread. I decided to try it again, but this time, I left the phone in the freezer for a short time (half an hour or so) without the battery. After time elapsed in the freezer to cool down the phone, I plugged in the USB to the phone while having my laptop near the refrigerator with LG Bridge loaded and ready to back up, and then put in the battery. Lo and behold, the phone did manage to boot up all the way to the lock screen, due to various sound cues from the phone (AT&T logo) and USB connectivity (from Windows 7). However, when I tried to unlock the phone, that's when it froze and rebooted. After that, it hit the boot loop and won't get as far as the initial try. So I'll keep trying to revive my phone long enough to get some data off of it and wipe it clean. I still have time with warranty, so I'm in no hurry. Besides, I attempted warranty processing last night and missed the opening as the warranty department closed early.
Update 01/11/2017: I managed to get my LG V10 phone to boot up further than the freezer trick by utilizing the hair dryer trick here. Basically, what the video shows is that one must take a hair dryer, blow dry on the highest heat setting to the bottom of the backside phone up to the point where the phone gets hot, without the battery for over a minute. After that, put in the battery, boot up the phone and blow dry the bottom of the phone and heat it up even further while it's booting. I had to repeat the hair dryer heating process many times in order to stabilize my phone because it would reboot within minutes after I try to initially back up with LG Bridge's LG Backup tool. I did manage to overheat the bottom part of the phone so much that Android denied charging the battery via USB connected to the computer. Further exacerbating the problem was that the battery was so hot, LG Bridge denied backup because it thought the battery charge status was under 30% when in fact, my LG V10 showed at 49%. I did get the most important file that I was after on my phone after many tries (kept rebooting on me), but I'll persist to back up the entire phone in case I needed something else before turning this phone over to AT&T warranty service.
Update 1/19/2017: As much as I tried to back up my LG V10 and wipe afterwards, my attempts were futile. The phone couldn't stabilize enough after reaching the home screen, and would reboot shortly thereafter. At least I got what I've wanted. When I kept trying to revive it with the hair dryer trick, it just wouldn't go pass the boot screen most of the time (i.e., LG logo or AT&T logo). It even got to the point where it would turn on slowly (i.e., there's a delay booting up when power was pressed on). So at this point, it appears that the boot loop of death is sinking in further into my LG V10. I also tried the freezer trick again and then going back to the hair dryer trick when the freezer trick stopped working, although not back to back, otherwise that would provide temperature shock to the components. The freezer trick did manage to get further, but it only happened twice where it got to the home screen and then rebooted. Note to those wondering if condensation would trip or activate the moisture sensors on the phone and the battery, it does not when you take careful steps of taking the phone out of the freezer and putting it into the refrigerator and then take it out, letting maybe 10 minutes pass by for each step of temperature transition so that the phone's temperature can get to room temperature without condensation buildup.
Anyways, I decided that I've spent way too much of my time trying to revive my phone to back up data that most likely I wouldn't need. I went the route of sending my phone to LG for repair instead of going to AT&T store and receiving a refurbished LG V10. I'd rather have my phone repaired by LG and receive my phone back with the repaired hardware than to receive someone else's LG V10. I based my decision on this thread here over at Android Central where someone sent in their phone for repair, got theirs back with a clean start (i.e., don't expect LG to either back up your data or reuse your memory storage as no personal data was saved). It is good to note that LG has extended LG V10 warranty of 1 year (12 months) to 15 months. I'm pretty sure LG granted a 3 month warranty extension on LG V10s due to the boot loop issue. I didn't realize I got the extension until thinking back, when I called AT&T warranty center, they told me I had about 86 days of warranty left, which is about 3 months extended from my 1 year of warranty when it ended. The phone was bubble wrapped (removed back cover, battery, SIM, microSD) and shipped off in a small box that I re-used from another item that was shipped to me. Shipping carrier is by FedEx Ground that was paid for by LG, being shipped to LG's repair center in Texas.
Update 01/24/2017: The phone has arrived at the Texas facility yesterday (Monday) according to FedEx, but the status of my repair hasn't been updated anymore than giving me estimated delivery date of 9 days. What's odd is that LG didn't update the received date at repair facility field and have deleted my FedEx tracking number.
Update 01/25/2017: LG updated the repair status last night which pretty much acknowledged item received, diagnosed, repaired, and prepared for shipment back to customer. The repair was "Swap Board (Main/RF) : Others". I should have the phone back on 01/28/2017 and will update then accordingly. It appears that LG probably replaced the entire mother board which would include the 64 GB of memory holding user data, among others. Considering that others have reported of receiving a freshly formatted phone, I would expect the same once the phone reaches back to me. I would highly doubt LG went the extra length to migrate data off of the failing motherboard onto the new one. It would be nice if they did.
Update 01/28/2017: I have received my phone today via FedEx Ground shipping, and they delivered on a Saturday. The status of my phone was factory reset. I can tell it was factory reset because I still have the unlimited tethering (hotspot) enabled from the previous rooting (Lollipop) and then went to Marshmallow and losing the root, but still have unlimited tethering. Also, Android OS is updated to H90021x (from the previous H90021w00), build number MRA58K, with Android security patch level 2016-11-01. You will need to set up the phone just like you did the first time. They also removed my tempered glass and left a narrow sticky film that doesn't cover the entire front screen glass that can be peeled off. Good thing I have an extra tempered glass for the V10. The phone came back with the same serial # and ESN/IMEI that I've sent to LG. If you're like me trying to migrate data from one LG phone to another, it's best to use the LG Backup in Backup & Reset under Settings that's found native in the phone. LG PC Suite and LG Bridge won't work with Verizon's LG G4 (VS986) on Windows 7 for me, no matter what I did (installed many LG G4 drivers, including Verizon's). Some backup apps, such as LG Backup (Sender) and Super Backup & Restore do not back up everything, neither does the native backup LG Backup in the Android Settings menu.
Update 02/03/2017: What appears to be a puzzling action on my repaired LG V10 is that I'm going to take no chance and back up my phone in case I end up losing data again. What happened earlier was that I was surfing the Internet with Chrome, reading up on a news article, when I was prompted to Miracast and enter a PIN. WTF? I ignored it a few times and then it got to the point where my phone was unresponsive with the Miracast prompts, but I was able to force my phone to reboot. Upon reboot, I noticed that the phone loading up was sluggish and not typically responsive. I decided to shutdown my phone to prevent further irreversible problem in the future (hint: boot loop). I waited for my phone to cool down for perhaps a few minutes before I powered on the phone again. This time, when the phone booted up, it was responsive as it normally has. Before all this happened, I didn't use my phone excessively nor extensive in a short period of time. I really have doubts that LG really applied a fix to their faulty connection problem and just used a replacement just to pass by.
Update 02/04/2017: I received an e-mail from LG requesting my feedback with respect to the repair. I gladly answered the survey, gave them good credit with respect to the repair itself, but when it comes to the quality of the LG product, they took a hit and I expressed my concern with respect to the boot loop.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You may not have to change your passwords. Depending on what hardware is damaged they will likely trash the whole board. If any part of the chipset is fried or damaged in some way, your safe since everything is on a single chip. So if it is a hardware failure on the chip, then all your stuff thats on there is going in trash to never see light of day again.
mobile_edc said:
Hi John!
I register this forum just for the purpose saying " Thank You! You are genius"
I followed your step by step guide and brought up my LG V10 to life, which casued by the so called " boot loop" problem few days ago.
I was almost ready to send my V10 back to the LG, and requesting for the replacemnt of the internal board of my LG V10. Luckily, I read your thread, and presume that your assumption is right with logical analysis. Now my phone is working without boot problem, and I successfully bring back my data from the internal memory, too.
Thank you so much, John!
eddie.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Glad to hear it worked, you are most welcome!
@johnkirchner you are a genius. Thanks for the advice, freshly baked V10 back to life.
johnkirchner said:
My wife's v10 started bootlooping about a week ago and is out of warranty. This happened right after doing a FOTA security update. I figured it was due to that so I tried resetting the phone but could not boot in to anything to get it to reset. After extensive searching and reading, I have "fixed" the phone so far. It has been booted up and running for almost 2 full days now. We are not using it at the moment, we had a spare phone so its not like we were going to be out of anything. Instead of the freezer trick (was not worried about data backup), I did the baking trick and as surprised as I was...it worked! Here is what I did if it might help anyone else.
Please note that your warranty will really be void after doing this, especially if anything gets damaged. The information here is reference only and results may vary due to altitude and baking temps (thought I would NEVER put that in a disclaimer for gadgets and software, lol). You may or may not have data loss either, so do not blame me!
You will need to take the phone apart so you will need a small precision set of screwdrivers. Check out the video from the link below to see how to disassemble the phone, you only need to get to the part where the circuit board is removed.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7N_mGT-P1ZA
And now...seriously,
1. Pre-heat your oven to 385 F (~195 C).
2. CAREFULLY take the circuit board out of the phone, use the video above as reference.
3. Place the circuit board in the oven and bake for 7 minutes. I set my board on a baking rack so it was not directly on a cookie sheet.
4. Take circuit board out, shut off oven and let sit for at least 20 minutes to fully cool down. Add salt for flavor? (j/k)
5. After cool down, CAREFULLY place circuit board back in and put phone back together.
6. Put battery in and let charge if needed before booting the phone up.
7. Cross fingers and turn the phone on!
We were at a point to where we did not want to file a claim if we were going to end up with the same phone possibly again and have issues so I figured I would try it out. My kids thought I was insane watching me bake a circuit board.
However, the electronics knowledge in me knows this is just enough to actually do solder reflow on the board. From the numerous posts that I have read, it appears that some of the soldering is faulty and sometimes a reflow will fix the issue. Since circuit boards are so small and intricate, it takes extremely serious skill to actually use a solder iron to fix those...so for those of us who are not extremely seriously skilled in soldering, the oven seems to work. Don't get me wrong, I can solder like no tomorrow...but not on circuit boards
So if you have nothing to lose...give this a shot!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Big thanks to you, LG V10 baked back to life, LG BackUP running 57% !
Its too bad I didn't know about this before hand. My phone just bootlooped last Saturday without warning. I contacted my carrier but I was literally 4 days over the warranty period with them. Contacted LG, and they told me they couldn't either repair or replace my phone because its an international model and they did not have the hardware for international models(no clue why they couldn't replace it, unless they stopped manufacturing this specific model). Either way, I didn't worry too much about my files as I had contacts and texts on the SD card as well as Google, and my pictures and media where stored on my SD card. However, for the latter, I didn't realize that you could only 'unlock' files with the same phone you locked them with, so they were sitting on my SD, completely useless. I also lost all my progress on Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Links because apparently Konami are idiots that don't realize they can link progress to a Google account rather than going through their own service.
I just got done disassembling the device and heating it up with a heat gun. I had nothing to lose, so why the hell not? Surprisingly, its managed to remain working just fine for 2 hours now. Managed to recover my locked files, my Duel Links progress, and my Authy backup. Still, I know it will eventually happen again, and I'm still under contract for another year so I'll be forced to buy another phone and still pay for this "almost" paper weight. Here's hoping that Class-Action Lawsuit actually leads somewhere and LG deals with this fairly.
@johnkirchner
You saved me couple of hundred of bucks.
I almost made a deal to buy a new phone and for the sake of wasting time, i tried your method.
I am shocked to see my phone in working again.
You are amazing.
Pretty sure my phone isn't in warranty anymore anyway since it's been over a year since obtaining it (sadly it's not eligible for an upgrade until January of next year, since pay-off rates are now every 2 years minimum), but I'm hesitant to try the bake method -- especially since I don't have my own oven currently, being that I'm staying with someone else's family currently due to economic situations.
With that said, I can get to the factory reset option by holding the Vol-Down + Power buttons, I just don't want to lose my data. I know for a fact USB Debugging is enabled, because I always enable that pretty much first thing when I get my Android phones, but I can't get ADB to recognize it. Windows always shows it as a "USB Charge Only Interface". I know there's a way to use ADB to backup data ("adb backup -all" should work IIRC) so I was going to try that first, then try the factory reset and see if it helps at all. Any suggestions?
If I can even get the phone to start up at all, just long enough to take it to AT&T, I can just trade it in for a new phone. Otherwise I'm stuck paying over $200 more for a phone that doesn't even work anymore anyway, just to get a new one.
johnkirchner said:
My wife's v10 started bootlooping about a week ago and is out of warranty. This happened right after doing a FOTA security update. I figured it was due to that so I tried resetting the phone but could not boot in to anything to get it to reset. After extensive searching and reading, I have "fixed" the phone so far. It has been booted up and running for almost 2 full days now. We are not using it at the moment, we had a spare phone so its not like we were going to be out of anything. Instead of the freezer trick (was not worried about data backup), I did the baking trick and as surprised as I was...it worked! Here is what I did if it might help anyone else.
Please note that your warranty will really be void after doing this, especially if anything gets damaged. The information here is reference only and results may vary due to altitude and baking temps (thought I would NEVER put that in a disclaimer for gadgets and software, lol). You may or may not have data loss either, so do not blame me!
You will need to take the phone apart so you will need a small precision set of screwdrivers. Check out the video from the link below to see how to disassemble the phone, you only need to get to the part where the circuit board is removed.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7N_mGT-P1ZA
And now...seriously,
1. Pre-heat your oven to 385 F (~195 C).
2. CAREFULLY take the circuit board out of the phone, use the video above as reference.
3. Place the circuit board in the oven and bake for 7 minutes. I set my board on a baking rack so it was not directly on a cookie sheet.
4. Take circuit board out, shut off oven and let sit for at least 20 minutes to fully cool down. Add salt for flavor? (j/k)
5. After cool down, CAREFULLY place circuit board back in and put phone back together.
6. Put battery in and let charge if needed before booting the phone up.
7. Cross fingers and turn the phone on!
We were at a point to where we did not want to file a claim if we were going to end up with the same phone possibly again and have issues so I figured I would try it out. My kids thought I was insane watching me bake a circuit board.
However, the electronics knowledge in me knows this is just enough to actually do solder reflow on the board. From the numerous posts that I have read, it appears that some of the soldering is faulty and sometimes a reflow will fix the issue. Since circuit boards are so small and intricate, it takes extremely serious skill to actually use a solder iron to fix those...so for those of us who are not extremely seriously skilled in soldering, the oven seems to work. Don't get me wrong, I can solder like no tomorrow...but not on circuit boards
So if you have nothing to lose...give this a shot!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i am absolutely blown away...i can't believe this worked. not that i didn't believe you, but i had to be skeptical until i tried it. and it worked. plain and simple. thanks so much for this post. i'm beside myself with excitement
Edit: well that lasted a whole 20 hours, this morning back to bootloop . sigh....was good while it lasted i guess
johnkirchner said:
My wife's v10 started bootlooping about a week ago and is out of warranty. This happened right after doing a FOTA security update. I figured it was due to that so I tried resetting the phone but could not boot in to anything to get it to reset. After extensive searching and reading, I have "fixed" the phone so far. It has been booted up and running for almost 2 full days now. We are not using it at the moment, we had a spare phone so its not like we were going to be out of anything. Instead of the freezer trick (was not worried about data backup), I did the baking trick and as surprised as I was...it worked! Here is what I did if it might help anyone else.
Please note that your warranty will really be void after doing this, especially if anything gets damaged. The information here is reference only and results may vary due to altitude and baking temps (thought I would NEVER put that in a disclaimer for gadgets and software, lol). You may or may not have data loss either, so do not blame me!
You will need to take the phone apart so you will need a small precision set of screwdrivers. Check out the video from the link below to see how to disassemble the phone, you only need to get to the part where the circuit board is removed.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7N_mGT-P1ZA
And now...seriously,
1. Pre-heat your oven to 385 F (~195 C).
2. CAREFULLY take the circuit board out of the phone, use the video above as reference.
3. Place the circuit board in the oven and bake for 7 minutes. I set my board on a baking rack so it was not directly on a cookie sheet.
4. Take circuit board out, shut off oven and let sit for at least 20 minutes to fully cool down. Add salt for flavor? (j/k)
5. After cool down, CAREFULLY place circuit board back in and put phone back together.
6. Put battery in and let charge if needed before booting the phone up.
7. Cross fingers and turn the phone on!
We were at a point to where we did not want to file a claim if we were going to end up with the same phone possibly again and have issues so I figured I would try it out. My kids thought I was insane watching me bake a circuit board.
However, the electronics knowledge in me knows this is just enough to actually do solder reflow on the board. From the numerous posts that I have read, it appears that some of the soldering is faulty and sometimes a reflow will fix the issue. Since circuit boards are so small and intricate, it takes extremely serious skill to actually use a solder iron to fix those...so for those of us who are not extremely seriously skilled in soldering, the oven seems to work. Don't get me wrong, I can solder like no tomorrow...but not on circuit boards
So if you have nothing to lose...give this a shot!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I gotta give it to sir john. I was hesitant to bake my board, but i figured i really wanna toast it anyway so what the heck. 15min after i turned off the oven i reassemble my v10, and it now boots onto home screen like magic.
Salt to taste
mobile_edc said:
Hi John!
I register this forum just for the purpose saying " Thank You! You are genius"
I followed your step by step guide and brought up my LG V10 to life, which casued by the so called " boot loop" problem few days ago.
I was almost ready to send my V10 back to the LG, and requesting for the replacemnt of the internal board of my LG V10. Luckily, I read your thread, and presume that your assumption is right with logical analysis. Now my phone is working without boot problem, and I successfully bring back my data from the internal memory, too.
Thank you so much, John!
eddie.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks john
After limited temporary success with the hair dryer method your post led me to the baking method. It took 3 attempts at increasing time and temps . Started at 385 for 7 min. And it tried to boot but not. Then tried 385 for 10 min and it made it to just past the red round hello. Then I went all in. 400 for 13 min. With a dash of salt and a sprinkle of mesquite flavor. I'm in Kansas city... we love our bbq...what can I say? Anyhow, it sure as hell worked.... can't believe it but yes indeed... and it makes for a great no **** kinda story... thanks to all who shared here... oh btw, toothpaste does in fact make for a great heat sink..... paddle faster I'm hearing banjos

Back Cover is opening

Hello
Before few days I noticed a strange sound from the back side of my phone. It was like a broken glass. When I turned over my phone, I saw, that the back cover was a bit open at the left side (where the Volume Buttons are), but it isn't broken. The whole side is open maybe about 1 mm. If i push the cover back it's opening again.
I think, that the battery is expanding, but the phone doesn't get hot, and I can use it normally. Everything works perfectly. Also I want to say, that the phone NEVER fell down and it also never fell into water. Only at this day I was at the beach, and it was a bit hot, but the phone was in my bag in the shadow
Now I want to ask, if it's safe to use (I don't want, that this thing explode in my hands, or at night while charging ). I was at my operator store, and they said, that they have to repair it, and this could take 3 Weeks(!). They would also reset all my data, I really don't know why. I am also thinking of repair it myself, but I don't know where to buy the Battery, and the Back Cover.
Some infos if it's important:
- Rooted
- Android 8.0
- 40°C - 43°C Battery Temperature at heavy Gaming with Max. settings
- Buyed in October 2016 (as a new device at my operator-shop)
- 4000 - 4200 times plugged into charger
- 750 full charging cycles
- charged mostly over original charger with fast charge
- never used Wireless Charging
- not tweaked by power or electicity current
- I have a Phone cover, which holds at the back side, but it also closes the Phone
Should I try to repair it myself or should I give it to my operator and they do it for me (of course I have to pay, because at Batterys there is a 6 Month warranty in Austria)
Thank you in advance and sorry for my bad english.
The chances are very good that the battery is expanding. The opening is in the right area for it to be the battery, and if it keeps reopening when you try to close it then it must be the battery pushing the cover off, as there's really nothing else in the phone that could do that.
You should definitely get it fixed. An expanding battery is bad news. It might not explode but it's not going to get better. You can fix it yourself (for example, look at the teardown on ifixit) but the main difficulty is getting a new battery that isn't a fake. Getting it fixed through your operator would probably give you a better chance of getting a real Samsung battery and having it repaired in such a way that it would still be water resistant.
Thanks for the reply. I think, I will give it to my operator and they should repair it, because I want to keep that the phone is water ressistent. Its not nesseary, but it's fine to have it.

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