DroidForums.net is the original Verizon Android Forum! Registered Users do not see these ads. Please Register - It's Free!
Page 3 of 14 FirstFirst 1 2 3 4 5 13 ... LastLast
Results 21 to 30 of 131

Thread: The official d2g sbf from TBH

  1. Senior Droid
    tebower's Avatar
    Member #
    12892
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Posts
    160
    Liked
    1 times
    Phone
    Droid 2 Global
    #21
    Silver - I can't say for sure if it's enough info, but it is the same exact information my phone shows.

    I have no need to actually flash it, so I won't be able to confirm that it worked.
  2. Master Droid
    silver6054's Avatar
    Member #
    139110
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Posts
    537
    Liked
    12 times
    Phone
    droid 4
    #22
    Quote Originally Posted by tebower View Post
    Silver - I can't say for sure if it's enough info, but it is the same exact information my phone shows.

    I have no need to actually flash it, so I won't be able to confirm that it worked.
    Thanks! I don't need to flash it yet, but it's good that someone else sees the same.
  3. Beta Team
    Ultim8gamr's Avatar
    Member #
    142809
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Posts
    125
    Phone
    Galaxy s3 (Verizon)
    #23
    I downloaded the full version of the sbf but would like to avoid having to reactivate the phone via the *228 number should I softbrick and flash the sbf. Is the lite version that doesn't flash the radio and require activation only available through the TBH app? Would love to have that as an option first.

    Sent from my DROID2 GLOBAL using DroidForums App
  4. Junior Droid
    gilmourd's Avatar
    Member #
    137114
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Posts
    27
    Phone
    Enter Current Phone Model Here
    #24
    Quote Originally Posted by CellZealot View Post
    Yes, the reason P3Droid states the other way is because he has so many different phones and the method he posted works on most or all of them.

    The only addition I would make to the overview of SBF files posted above is that none of the SBF files will write to the data or cache partition by default and so to truly return to a "factory state" requires a factory reset/wipe of those partitions.

    This is best done before a flash if you anticipate having any problems ie; you are on the OTA 2.4.33 already and are flashing the 2.4.29 SBF for any reason.
    If you are using the bootstrap recovery and you want to keep your data partition for the sake of ease, then you can select to wipe cache by itself.
    Then, press/hold the up arrow on the keyboard while pressing the camera key to reboot from recovery. You will go directly to bootloader then and can connect the phone to PC and proceed to flash.

    The reason this trick is important and useful is because if you were to reboot normally from the bootstrap recovery after wiping the cache partition it would be rebuilt again with the 2.4.33 components that you just wiped. Holding the up arrow and going directly to bootloader avoids this problem.

    This is only if you are intent on preserving data for some reason.

    You can also do this after you have flashed but it will bootloop and have to get into recovery and it's generally messier and scarier if you do it that way.
    First of all thanks for a quick and detailed reply. Thanks to Tebower too.

    Let me see if I got all this right. The custom recovery bootstrap tool is a program that allows one to backup and flash a new rom onto the phone. It lets you run a custom rom, say the Fission 2.4, that didn't come from Motorola.

    If things go horribly wrong while you are flashing a new rom, and you can't boot into the system, then you use the sbf file. You need to use developer tools on a Windows machine to flash this file onto the phone and return it to its factory state.

    Do I have it right so far?
  5. Master Droid
    NiceGuysFinishLast's Avatar
    Member #
    156937
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Posts
    748
    Liked
    4 times
    Phone
    HTC Rezound
    #25
    Quote Originally Posted by gilmourd View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by CellZealot View Post
    Yes, the reason P3Droid states the other way is because he has so many different phones and the method he posted works on most or all of them.

    The only addition I would make to the overview of SBF files posted above is that none of the SBF files will write to the data or cache partition by default and so to truly return to a "factory state" requires a factory reset/wipe of those partitions.

    This is best done before a flash if you anticipate having any problems ie; you are on the OTA 2.4.33 already and are flashing the 2.4.29 SBF for any reason.
    If you are using the bootstrap recovery and you want to keep your data partition for the sake of ease, then you can select to wipe cache by itself.
    Then, press/hold the up arrow on the keyboard while pressing the camera key to reboot from recovery. You will go directly to bootloader then and can connect the phone to PC and proceed to flash.

    The reason this trick is important and useful is because if you were to reboot normally from the bootstrap recovery after wiping the cache partition it would be rebuilt again with the 2.4.33 components that you just wiped. Holding the up arrow and going directly to bootloader avoids this problem.

    This is only if you are intent on preserving data for some reason.

    You can also do this after you have flashed but it will bootloop and have to get into recovery and it's generally messier and scarier if you do it that way.
    First of all thanks for a quick and detailed reply. Thanks to Tebower too.

    Let me see if I got all this right. The custom recovery bootstrap tool is a program that allows one to backup and flash a new rom onto the phone. It lets you run a custom rom, say the Fission 2.4, that didn't come from Motorola.

    If things go horribly wrong while you are flashing a new rom, and you can't boot into the system, then you use the sbf file. You need to use developer tools on a Windows machine to flash this file onto the phone and return it to its factory state.

    Do I have it right so far?


    So far, so good. The developer tool is RSD Lite, available for free from motorola. I started this morning with zero knowledge of RSD lite and took my phone back to its factory new state within an hour. It's pretty easy stuff, and there's tons of useful posts on this forum.
  6. Droid
    tecwizrd's Avatar
    Member #
    146392
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Posts
    40
    Twitter
    tecwizrd
    Phone
    Motorola Droid 2 Global
    #26
    I figured I would post this in the official thread. This way I can find it when I need it. Those of you who don't use Windows or Mac can flash using this. It is straight forward and easy to do.

    Edit: Be sure to boot into the bootloader before you start sbf_flash.
    Flash the SBF from within a Linux environment.

    Thanks go to mbm on OpticalDelusion.
    Last edited by tecwizrd; 01-05-2011 at 08:41 PM. Reason: Update
  7. Droid Newbie
    cosmin's Avatar
    Member #
    157586
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Posts
    1
    Phone
    Enter Current Phone Model Here
    #27
    does this unblock the radio so that the phone can be used on T-mobile/ATT network?
  8. Master Droid
    SGMD1's Avatar
    Member #
    32744
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Posts
    866
    Liked
    54 times
    Phone
    Droid 4
    #28
    Just flashed this .sbf onto my D2G...first time around it failed because my USB drivers weren't up to date. Go to the Motorola Mobility website and download the most recent USB drivers if you haven't in awhile.

    Had RSDLite 4.6 so uninstalled that and installed 4.9. Flashed then factory reset = just like new!

    Quote Originally Posted by cosmin View Post
    does this unblock the radio so that the phone can be used on T-mobile/ATT network?
    Nope
  9. Droid
    IMRoMuLuS's Avatar
    Member #
    157719
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Southern California
    Posts
    34
    Phone
    Droid 2 Global
    #29
    I am stuck at the bootloader screen. I ran RSDLite 4.9 and it fails at 99%. Any ideas?

    I downloaded he RSD and SBF but the motorola file link was messed up. mind helping me out? thanks


    EDIT: 4.8.0 Motorola Mobility is needed, link is broken which caused about 6 hours of work for me since this is my first rooting experience. Here is the official link to Motorola.

    Motorola Site
    Last edited by IMRoMuLuS; 01-08-2011 at 05:02 AM.
  10. Droid Ninja
    zero7404's Avatar
    Member #
    22848
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Posts
    1,103
    Liked
    1 times
    Phone
    Droid X
    #30
    just being paranoyingly verifyingly cautious here ...
    this is the OEM motorola SBF file, right ? no modifications/hacks/etc ?

    the flash procedure is the same as the flash procedure using the 'root droid 1 regardless ...' thread instructions, but with this sbf file, correct ?

    where can i get rsd 4.9. i'm on 4.6 ... ?

    many thanks in advance
    g-nex stock 4.1.1 rooted
Page 3 of 14 FirstFirst 1 2 3 4 5 13 ... LastLast

Ads

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

Similar Threads

  1. Replies: 3
    Last Post: 09-27-2010, 09:59 AM
  2. So now that 2.2 is official... HELP.
    By BlackMarket in forum Droid Hacks
    Replies: 19
    Last Post: 08-26-2010, 10:23 PM
  3. will i get the official ota
    By hashsi99 in forum Android General Discussions
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 08-09-2010, 09:19 AM
  4. Official 2.1
    By BlueSami in forum HTC Droid Eris
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: 07-17-2010, 10:31 PM
  5. 2.1 is official
    By Big Ry in forum Droid Hacks
    Replies: 20
    Last Post: 04-02-2010, 10:43 AM

Search tags for this page

2.4.29 sbf
,
2.4.29 sbf download
,

d2g sbf

,
d2g sbf 2.2
,
d2g sbf download
,
droid 2 global 2.4.29 sbf
,
droid 2 global sbf 2.4.29
,
droid 2 global sbf file (2.4.29) full and rsdlite
,
full sbf droid 2 global 2.4.33
,
how to sbf d2g
,
sbf
,
sbf 2.4.33
,

sbf d2g

,
sbf for d2g
,
tbh droid 2 global
Click on a term to search our site for related topics.
Find us on Google+