raybay 03-07-2008, 06:07 PM No, Mr. Snoobs, this is not right. Password removal is machine by machine. Each model can have a different password hardware and software system... Several models may be similar, then you might have the next model that is different... and it varies widely to very widely by brand and model.
Shorting out some chips worked once on older models, but those could usually never be passworded again. Others, even adjacent Dell models, can not be shorted out.
Newer systems require a EEPROM programmer with a knowledge of how the system password works. There are many Dell and Lenovo brands that cannot be fixed by a normal human being once the password is there, unless it is done at the home base of the manufacturer.
It is as much a matter of luck as anything.
MrSnoobs 03-07-2008, 07:16 PM No, Mr. Snoobs, this is not right. Password removal is machine by machine. Each model can have a different password hardware and software system... Several models may be similar, then you might have the next model that is different... and it varies widely to very widely by brand and model.
Shorting out some chips worked once on older models, but those could usually never be passworded again. Others, even adjacent Dell models, can not be shorted out.
Newer systems require a EEPROM programmer with a knowledge of how the system password works. There are many Dell and Lenovo brands that cannot be fixed by a normal human being once the password is there, unless it is done at the home base of the manufacturer.
It is as much a matter of luck as anything.
Well mine is a D400, so I dont know if that qualifies as "Old". I realise that once I erase the password, it cannot be passworded again (at least not without re assigning a service tag, which I believe is possible) but thats a moot point for me. I have no interest in passwording the Mobo again.
I have heard of particular people successfully shorting a D400, but using pins that make no sense according to the data sheets of the specific EEPROM chips. For instance, I thought that the point of the chip shorting method was to bypass the signal asking for passwords around the eeprom chip, sending it straight to the GROUND pin of the chip. However, the guides I have read all seem to short pins 3 and 6. Neither of these are GND, so I am unsure of which signals need to be shorted. If I knew this, I could probably short any chip out there!
So, in short, which pins should I short, IF one assumes it does work!? Many thanks in advance.
champ 03-07-2008, 10:57 PM I CAN UNLOCK THE HP AND COMPAQ LAPTOPS.
ALL I NEED IS THE HASH. CODE.EMAIL IT TO ME
email removed
champ 03-07-2008, 11:02 PM the papercliptrick works on your model dell laptop iam shure and pin 3 is ground you short it a couple of times to pin 6 till you have the manufactured mode and the hit fn-x and the password is gone.when you want i send you the guide to do it
MrSnoobs 03-08-2008, 05:47 AM the papercliptrick works on your model dell laptop i am sure and pin 3 is ground you short it a couple of times to pin 6 till you have the manufactured mode and the hit fn-x and the password is gone.when you want i send you the guide to do it
That would be absolutely wonderful if you could. If you are certain it is pin 3 to Pin 6, then I shall try this also.
I direct you however, to this site: http://tiny.cc/xRmkt
It is a data sheet for the 24c256n chip I have. It clearly states that pin 3 is NC, or "No Connection". Pin 4 is ground apparently, and pin 6 is SCL, or the Clock input. It makes sense to ground the input, as this would bypass the eeprom chip and therefore short it. Or something. I am not an electronics expert by any degree!
Is it the pressing of Fn-X that clears the tag/password, or the shorting?
Going to pains now: Most dell unlocking guides mention the 24c02 chip. The datasheet is here: http://tiny.cc/u3LOC
This shows pins 3 and 6 to be the chip inputs and clock input respectively. This is what has lead to my confusion overall. Which pins are meant to be shorted!!??
Yes, Champ, if you would be so kind as to send me that guide, I would be in your debt. Many thanks in advance.
Elektronix 03-08-2008, 06:49 AM Hello
Please for unlock code for HP pavilion ze5185.
Readed hash code is: 02013
Thanks
nuntzio 03-08-2008, 08:05 AM hi all. i have a dell m90 precision but i need the admin. pass. If you people can help me please doo it. my service tag is: #4P83B2J -595B. If you have any information about this modell please leave a mesage. I spend a lot of money but nothing.
Thanks in advance. You are my last hope!!!!!!
MrSnoobs 03-08-2008, 08:23 AM Still no luck with Pins 3 and 5. Made the chip spark shorting 4 and 5, but nothing more. Can't even replicate that anymore!
Any ideas?
MrSnoobs 03-08-2008, 11:38 AM Right. Although I have learnt a lot about EEPROMs and laptop architectures and Dell password protections etc, I am stil a dolt. It was pins 3 and 5, but on a COMPLETELY different chip. So, for the record, the D400 eeprom chip is on the TOP of the motherboard, on the left hand side. Was sooo easy to do once I found the right chip!
All this thanks to Champ. Legend from the Netherlands. In your debt brother.
sayword 03-08-2008, 07:27 PM Does anyone know if a Dell Inspiron 6400 has an eeprom chip and where it is located. I have this laptop taken apart but can't seem to find the chip. Will the shorting method even work with this model. TIA.
Edit: I found in another thread that there is no eeprom chip in the 6400 and that the bios password is stored in the keyboard controller? Is this true and if so, can I short the keyboard controller or is there any other alternatives to this. TIA
raybay 03-08-2008, 08:41 PM You cannot short out the password on a Dell Inspiron 6400. Many have tried. I have yet to meet a successfool.
sayword 03-08-2008, 10:09 PM You cannot short out the password on a Dell Inspiron 6400. Many have tried. I have yet to meet a successfool.
damn, that sucks...so that means i have to pay for a password...can anyone pm me with the cheapest one...TIA...
Jake_c400 03-09-2008, 10:05 AM Rundam_,
I know you get 100s of messages like these, so first off I will apologise, but it really does seem like you're the only one who can help (bar taking the machine apart, and I don't have enough hours in the day)
Seems you have the knack of getting these master passwords for -595Bs; so here's my story.
Well, my dad worked at a company called EHS Brann, who gave him a couple of laptops to work from home on. When he left his job there, they asked for the best one back, which he gave, but did not bother asking for the Dell Latitude C400, which I have now inherited. Unfortunately, no-one knows the BIOS password, and my dad can't remember it (it was only ever written down on a post-it note before, and that got recycled). So I'm rather stuffed.
My service tag is #G7G5N0J-595B.
Any help would be greatly appreciated, thanks
- Jake.
On a side not, I MAY try to short it later on, but to verify, I've heard two different opinions...do I short pins 3 and 5, or pins 3 and 6?
Thanks :)
raybay 03-09-2008, 03:05 PM According to the service tag you left, this computer has been refurbished by Dell, which makes the password repair much more difficult.
Some password people can fix it, because the Dell Latitude C400 was not all that difficult, but this Dell does not appear to be as you described unless the company bought them from Dell as refurbs.
The shorting technique posted in these forums should work, but the service tag will not work again for the restoration of Dell XP software.
mscrx 03-09-2008, 06:31 PM sorry but almost everybody uses the term "bios password".
so I have to ask again. which password do you need for the c400?
1. the system password (gray/white screen)
2. the harddisk password (gray/white screen)
3. the bios configure password
please post back!
papirico 03-09-2008, 06:45 PM have a Dell Latitude D531 laptop with: SERVICE TAG 8HZ8LF1-595B. Now, i have try all the password removal software and master password Generators but none of those work. I can't boot from anything untill i reset the bios password. I open my laptop but I could not locate the EEPROM 24c02 chip. So, I like to know if anyone here has been able to unlock any dell with service tag ending on 595B or anyone knows if there is a EEPROM chip that can be reset and where is located at. I would really appreciated.
Paragon33 03-09-2008, 07:41 PM The D531 uses a 25 series EEProm Chip and can not be cleared by eeprom shorting. You need a guy with a Master Password generator for the 595B systems and they all charge fees, except for rustam, who uses this forum for free help, but not often, and not for very recent systems.
Paragon33 03-09-2008, 08:21 PM Does anyone know if a Dell Inspiron 6400 has an eeprom chip and where it is located. I have this laptop taken apart but can't seem to find the chip. Will the shorting method even work with this model. TIA.
Edit: I found in another thread that there is no eeprom chip in the 6400 and that the bios password is stored in the keyboard controller? Is this true and if so, can I short the keyboard controller or is there any other alternatives to this. TIA
The 6400 has a 25 series EEProm chip, and it can not be shorted, Starting with the D420,D520,D620, D820 and contemporary Inspirons, all of them came with a 25 series chip. The inspiron 9300 and Latitude D810 are the last Dell models with the 24 series chips that can be shorted. I have noticed a ton of "horse dung" on this site from people who do not know what they are talking about. For one, Passwords of your own can be set on "paperclipped" machines if the Service Tag is reset using Service Tag EXE. I have done by now over 70 boards and laptops, and had problems with only 2; those appeared to have problems that were covered up by the passwords. One was a D510 with a wireless controller problem which was fixed by replacing it with another mother board, the other was an Inspiron 2200 that had a crumbled CD Drive connector that would not allow the CDRW/DVD drive to be recognized as present and also required replacement with another board. I had a couple of I8000/C800 boards that had a mid-series BIOS Version on them that was "buggy" and would allow no boot from any device; those required replacement of the socketed BIOS Chip with another chip with a late BIOS version flashed on it.
Paragon33 03-09-2008, 08:49 PM According to the service tag you left, this computer has been refurbished by Dell, which makes the password repair much more difficult.
Some password people can fix it, because the Dell Latitude C400 was not all that difficult, but this Dell does not appear to be as you described unless the company bought them from Dell as refurbs.
The shorting technique posted in these forums should work, but the service tag will not work again for the restoration of Dell XP software.
When Dell refurbed some of the older models, they flashed the BIOS and removed the -D35B system which could be cleared of Passwords with the old Latitude Master_PW generator, and substituted the -595B System. The C600/Inspiron 4000 wwere the last Dells to be affected by this change. I have a copy of this older generator and have used it several times successfully on a CPiA, CPTS, CPxH, CPxJ models and one C600 that still had the original factory BIOS version. Dell also changed out the EEProm chips beginning with the C600/Inspiron4000 models to chips that could no longer be shorted before Power On, but required a delay of from 1-6 seconds before applying the short. Dell was characteristically voiceless about what they had done as you would expect, and the Issues Fixed and Enhancements Texts about the BIOS Flashes had nothing about this change
The Service Tag has absolutely nothing to do with reinstalling W-XP. The Dell refurbs owners were no longer eligible to request any Dell OEM software as replacements, or so I was told with my original Latitude CPiD, which was a Dell refurb and came without any ,and the W98SE COA sticker had been removed also.
Paragon33 03-10-2008, 03:43 PM I recently have been using a modified technique on some of the more stubborn EEProm chips using the modified shorter I have been using for more than 2 years; that is a straight pin with a piece of wire soldered to it and a mini-gator clip at the other wire end. The new technique is to ground the clip and place the tip of the pin between the #5 and #6 legs(pins), turn on the board and then move the pin back and forth to touch each of 5&6 pins altermately with a touch on each for 1-2 seconds. This drains the chip in spurts and avoids the shutdown which results if you just touch a single pin. This has worked on 7 boards so far, an I-8200, a C840, a D600, a D510, a I-2200, a C610 and a C640. Also, having a charged CMOS Battery helps immeasurably.
Tmagic650 03-10-2008, 04:12 PM Interesting technique Paragon33,
how many motherboards have you trashed?
mscrx 03-10-2008, 06:14 PM do you have a picture or illustration of the clip - wire - mini-gator device for those who are not native speakers?
Paragon33 03-10-2008, 08:55 PM Interesting technique Paragon33,
how many motherboards have you trashed?
That's right, always take the POSITIVE approach, especially if you have not tried it. The 2 problem boards(that is all) both booted and worked OK except for the aforementioned problems and the Grounding had nothing to do with creating either problem.
Paragon33 03-10-2008, 09:09 PM do you have a picture or illustration of the clip - wire - mini-gator device for those who are not native speakers?
Yes, I have a picture, but the 100kb limit on attachments prevents my attaching it here. This linked page on the website shows it by clicking the word "shorter"
http://www.download.centre4service.com/introd.html
kimsland 03-10-2008, 09:21 PM Updated my pic !! :)
http://i31.tinypic.com/350qy6s.jpg
Yung.FAB 03-10-2008, 10:36 PM If anyone could help me with Hash Code 16163
I have a hp pavilion dv2000 forgot the password a while ago...
Hp wants to charge me $200 for them to repair it and I refuse to pay that...
It would help a lot and I would greatly appreciate it
mscrx 03-11-2008, 05:19 AM guys, thanks for the pic!
guliver 03-11-2008, 02:36 PM Hi,
i have a HP Omnibook vt6200 Laptop i can't enter the BIOS configuration because i have no PW. Can anyboda please help and calculate the PW, hashcode is 05947.
Thanks in advance
guliver
Yung.FAB 03-11-2008, 07:49 PM Hey...
Well I have a Hp pavilion dv2000 and I am having problems with my bios password. Ive been tryn to access information on my laptop for school purposes and can't seem to remember what I entered as my password. I've talked to tech support at hp and they want to charge me $293 to have them take a look at it and do what they need. I can't afford that so I'm here roaming these boards.. If anyone can help me out the hash code is 16163 or if u need any other information to generate a bios password please get bac to me I really appreciate it.
erndog720 03-11-2008, 08:33 PM I have not used my comp in a couple months because of problems any way i type in my HD password and it is accepted but now the BIOS password is some how set i need to know if there is a backdoor password or some way of bypassing or resetting it any help would be appreciated.
raybay 03-11-2008, 08:53 PM Generally, not possible to happen without keyboard action or fingerprint action.
Darn near impossible to fix on a Thinkpad without replacing the Motherboard.
Met a lot of people who claim they can do it. Nobody has actually produced, that I have heard about.
Good luck. Let us know if you get a reliable source.
Try calling IBM
If you are a registered owner, call 1-(800) 426-7378 and have handy your serial number, type number and relevant part numbers or look for IBMSERV.
erndog720 03-11-2008, 09:21 PM I thought that would be the case thanks for the info raybay
adelica 03-12-2008, 12:39 PM Hello!
My compaq nx9005 Hash code: 11386
Please
THX
lamiaa 03-14-2008, 12:10 PM hi
can you please help me with this problem that i have with my HP OMNIBOOK xe3 Hashcode =06055= and I forgot the password of my bios
i would be vey happy if i could unlock the bios on this machine as im unable to use the laptop
G_Mez 03-14-2008, 01:20 PM First off thank you all for being here and providing a great help.
Now my issue, which I think I have figured out, but just want to run up the flagpole.
I'm helping someone out who's son ( 8yr old ) has put some passwords on, and now can't remember ANY of them...
Latitude CP M233XT service tag *******-D35B
Locked out at bootup, got MASTERPW.exe to generate a password
Unlocked grey screen so I can get into BIOS
Unlocked HD
I get into setup but can't change password to unlock settings...
The unit boots up from HD only, if I pull HD then I get "no bootable device"
So I let it boot from HD
Now I get to logon screen on W2K, none of the passswords provided to me by owner work -
I pulled the hd and put it on USB adapter, I can read files fine from another W2K machine - but I don't dare rewrite anything on drive as I'm hoping to retrieve the W2K and office key in the event I am forced to reinstall.
I think my only course of action is to short pins 3 & 6 on 24CO2 chip during power up... - and that's where my plan ends.
I believe that clears the way for me to enter setup, change boot sequence and run my UBCD4win CD to get the keys and with anyluck retrieve old password and erase it.
Any further advice ? or have I parked this one too close to the cliff ??
Thanks in advance
_mez
kimsland 03-14-2008, 05:53 PM Please try Bios Password:
1HE0ZZ3D
or
7507EC6K
Also do you have access to floppy boot in cmos?
If so, then you can also try: CLRCMOS (http://www.esupport.com/techsupport/UTILS/clrcmos11/clrcmos.exe)
Diverdyl 03-14-2008, 06:58 PM I've thoroughly tried all solutions previously mentioned on my Dell Latitude CPi, with no success. My system tag is #VJ6BB**-D35B, and i tried entering it into the latitude.exe program so many different ways, with the same result each time, 954ENKAZ, which refuses to work for me, even when i hold ctrl and press enter x2.... any advice?
Express service tag, if nec.: 529-627-43
kimsland 03-14-2008, 07:00 PM Please try:
1HE0ZZ3D
or
7507EC6K
clackc2000 03-14-2008, 10:10 PM My hashcode [11932]? can you help with master password? It's is an hp presario V3000. I've tried to the best of my abilities find it for myself, with no luck. Is there a way that somebody would able tell me how to this for myself? Many thanks in advance for your time and consideration!
clackc2000 03-14-2008, 10:26 PM My hashcode [11932]? can you help with master password? It's is an hp presario V3000. I've tried to the best of my abilities find it for myself, with no luck. Is there a way you be able tell me how to this for myself? Many thanks in advance for your time and consideration
guliver 03-15-2008, 06:55 AM Hi Kimsland,
thanks for your help, but neither the given passwords nor clrcmos.exe works. Any other suggestion?
thanks one more time,
guliver
kimsland 03-15-2008, 09:10 AM Thanks
We'll let G_Mez decide on that.
If I had my way (and it is possible)
I'd make them all free here !
Hi, I have a Dell Latitude D610, Service Tag FCRD3B1. I have just tried to install a new 2.5 inch HD in a Dell Module (DVD slot), however it will not let me read as I get a grey screen asking for a -595B password w hen I insert it into the bay. I have called Dell but they send me in circles, is there anyone out there who can generate a password or help me clear the present one - if it exists?
jerstrike 03-15-2008, 01:42 PM Hi everyone, a friend of mine asked me for repairing his laptop (Dell Latitude D620), his uncle bought it at a flea market in texas but when he turned it on(here at mexico, the battery was discharged) he realized it has a bios pass, i tried to locate the 24c02 but i read all the post in some threads, and there's no solution at least with the shorting method. the number is #5PLSKB1-595B. I don't know if it's stolen or not, the only thing i know is it has bios pass, could anyone of here help me to unlock it?
salu2 from Monterrey México
(excuse for my bad english, hehe)
raybay 03-15-2008, 01:44 PM The D610 is one of the difficult ones. There are huge numbers of posts in this forum which you should be able to find in a search. They relate to password issues with the -595B (refurbished) issues for the Latitude D610 and D620.
miraged 03-15-2008, 02:27 PM Hi everyone, almost 3 weeks i'm trying to find out how to remove password from latitude d620, and after lots of reading i found that only few people can unlock laptop with this service tag 8g2k72j, because it is ending in 595b. I tried both latitude.exe and Latitude_MasterPW.exe, but they works only with -D35B numbers.
So can anyone help me with this?
This laptop is bought from second hand, and i see that it has been being used for 2 years already.., also i saw that sticker on the back with service tag nuber is wiped-off, it seems that somenone didnt knew anything about service tag built into laptop itself..
raybay 03-15-2008, 08:43 PM The original service tag was removed, and the new restrictive tag was likely programmed into the EEPROM by Dell or a Dell Contractor... This action was to remove the original owner, and relevant users.
Dell has the answer. But you likely will have to pay for it.
champ 03-15-2008, 08:46 PM i can unlock hp and compaq only i need is the hash code
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I CAN UNLOCK THE HP AND COMPAQ LAPTOPS.
ALL I NEED IS THE HASH. CODE.EMAIL IT TO ME
email removed
TrickLess 03-15-2008, 08:57 PM compaq nx9010 system hash 02359.
anyone? thanks.
guyzx 03-15-2008, 09:06 PM servics tag #1q2j43j-595B
plz help me to unlock my laptop...
guyzel.gmail.com -> MY EMAIL
thanx 4 all :)
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