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How To Change Boot Animation Amazon Hd 10

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DragonFire1024
  • #1
I finally figured out what was stopping a custom boot animation from existence installed onto the HD 10 running stock FireOS. This guide will show you how to replace the boot animation, to just nearly anything you want. For reference, we are using my favorite Android boot animation from Marshmallow, but at that place is Lollipop kick animation likewise. Y'all demand to be rooted in order to complete this guide.

****THIS MAY NOT WORK FOR YOUR TABLET. RESULTS Tin can VARY. YOU ARE PERFORMING THIS GUIDE AT YOUR OWN Run a risk. WORST Instance SCENERIO: NO Boot Animation (MUST REFLASH YOUR CURRENT VERSION OF Fire Os TO RESTORE IT)****

1. Download the Marshmallow boot animation nothing from this thread (1080p is perfect) to your internal storage. Using a root explorer, open up the null file and tap system and then media and extract 'bootanimation.nil' to your internal storage.

ii. Download 'bootanimation.zip' at the end of this mail service and excerpt the 'bootanimation' file to your desktop PC or the internal storage of your tablet. (THIS IS Not A FLASHABLE Zero FILE)

3. Again, using a root explorer, navigate to /arrangement/bin and make a copy the 'bootanimation' file and dorsum it up to a folder in your storage. At present copy the 'bootanimation' file yous downloaded in step 2 and paste it in /system/bin, overwriting the existing one. Make sure to set the permissions of the file to rwxr-xr-ten

four. Using a root explorer again, go back to your internal storage and copy the 'bootanimation.zip' yous extracted earlier in step ane. Then navigate to /arrangement/media and paste 'bootanimation.naught'. Set up the permissions to rw-r--r--

v. Reboot and picket your animation. See video: https://www.youtube.com/scout?v=3lmNGAn_YIY

HOW?

The respond was in /system/bin. Amazon modified the 'bootanimation' file in /system/bin so just their kicking blitheness is the one used. If you had only placed the aught in /system/media, the animation would animate for a few seconds, freeze and only before the cease of booting, would start to animate over again. I tried portrait and landscape. I tried unlike resolutions. I tried different animations and every one of the animations would freeze. I opened upward the ROM for the Fire 7 (Burn Nexus ROM by @ggow) and copied the 'bootanimation' file from /system/bin over to the stock FireOS ROM on the HD 10, and set the proper permissions. Problem solved!

Updates:
January 11, 2019: The bootanimation-STOCK.zip fastened below, contains the stock FireOS bootanimation. But delete the bootanimation.cipher in /system/media (if in that location is one). Extract/unzip the bootanimation-STOCK.zip into internal storage and copy/paste the bootanimation file to /organization/bin, overwriting the one in that location.

Attachments

Last edited:
dondraper23
  • #2
Awesome post, as ever, Mr. DragonFire1024
  • #4
Wonder if we can use the Oreo Kicking animation I'm using for my Moto G4??
DragonFire1024
  • #5
Wonder if we can utilize the Oreo Boot animation I'm using for my Moto G4??

Should be able to copy the .zilch from /system/media to the same binder on the Hard disk 10. The worst that can happen is it won't work (but won't interruption anything. Yous may get a black screen until the booting finishes) or the graphics will be too small.

Edit: still need to overwrite the bootanimation file in system/bin no affair what animation you want to use. It only needs to be washed in one case

Concluding edited:
  • #6
Should be able to re-create the .zip from /system/media to the same folder on the Hard disk drive 10. The worst that can happen is information technology won't piece of work (but won't break anything. Y'all may get a blackness screen until the booting finishes) or the graphics will be too small.

Edit: nonetheless need to overwrite the bootanimation file in system/bin no thing what animation you lot want to use. It just needs to be done once


Alright, I'll requite information technology a endeavor...Thanks for the Reply.
dondraper23
  • #7
DragonFire1024
I was just curious if you plan to do any more than YouTube videos as proof of concepts to coincide with your very helpful posts
DragonFire1024
  • #viii
DragonFire1024
I was just curious if y'all plan to do any more YouTube videos as proof of concepts to coincide with your very helpful posts

Depends what I find or do and if it should accept a video. I'k always working on something ?
dondraper23
  • #9
Depends what I find or do and if it should have a video. I'm always working on something

I know y'all are and I always look frontward to what y'all post next!
dondraper23
  • #12
I cannot, regardless of what I do, get this to work.
I have followed the instructions - exactly - multiple times now.
I have tried numerous bootanimation.zero, including the one linked to in OP.
Files are in the proper locations, file permissions are set equally specified.
Information technology doesn't matter if I take the zip in /system/media or not, I become a blackness screen until UI loads.

Power on --> amazon logo --> black screen --> UI, no matter what I seem to practise.

Whatever help would be greatly appreciated. This is driving me nuts, I just don't understand what I'g missing or doing wrong.

  • #xiii
help

Yeah, I followed all the directions and yet cant get it to work nor can I get the original kicking animation to work.

  • #fourteen
Yeah, I followed all the directions and still deceit go it to piece of work nor can I go the original boot animation to work.

I tin't either. I tried later on reading your comment.
No zip in /media, restored bootanimation in /bin to the original, still just a blackness screen during boot.
So this bankrupt the bootanimation altogether.

Edit: I will add that my stock OS was 5.6.0.one. I suspect something has changed from previous versions, what was your stock version? What was OP'southward?

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DragonFire1024
  • #15
I can't either. I tried afterward reading your comment.
No zip in /media, restored bootanimation in /bin to the original, still simply a black screen during kick.
So this bankrupt the bootanimation altogether.

Edit: I volition add that my stock Os was v.6.0.1. I suspect something has changed from previous versions, what was your stock version? What was OP's?


You have to place the bootanimation.zip in /system/media afterwards overwriting the file in /system/bin. Unzip the animation in the link in OP. There will be another zip inside information technology. that's the goose egg y'all employ.
  • #16
Yous have to place the bootanimation.null in /system/media after overwriting the file in /organisation/bin. Unzip the blitheness in the link in OP. There will exist some other zip within it. that's the nix you use.

Yeah I follow, and I did and then several times. I can't even revert to having the stock "burn" kick animation.
Following the guide effectively broke my kick animation altogether. Again, I cannot even get dorsum to having the original boot blitheness. Same affair the guy who replied after me reported as well.
DragonFire1024
  • #17
Yeah I follow, and I did so several times. I can't fifty-fifty revert to having the stock "burn down" boot animation.
Post-obit the guide effectively broke my boot animation altogether. Again, I cannot even go back to having the original kicking blitheness. Same thing the guy who replied afterwards me reported likewise.

Make sure the permissions are prepare correctly. .bin file: rwxr-xr-ten and the .zip: rw-r--r--
  • #eighteen
Make certain the permissions are set correctly. .bin file: rwxr-xr-x and the .zip: rw-r--r--

Yes, I accept, numerous times. As I have said.

I'm going to flash my system.img backup and see if that restores the stock boot animation, because nothing else has.

Edit: dd-ing my system.img of my mail service-root supersu backup restored my kicking animation to stock.

Final Edit/Update:
Confirming that this does indeed work. I'm non sure what exactly I did the kickoff time, but it completely botched the boot blitheness.
dd'd arrangement.img (I had other compelling reasons to anyhow), followed the instructions again, exactly as they are written.
I didn't even excerpt the zip on PC and then push, I did it all in ES.
The first time I did this I think I had some sort of permission issues (had to delete bootanimation and so paste the replacement, couldn't overwrite), and I suspect that combined with a little user error ruined boot blitheness. Anyway, thank yous for the guide @DragonFire1024. This is a little matter, but completely worth it, imo.

Last edited:
DragonFire1024
  • #19
Yes, I accept, numerous times. As I accept said.

I'm going to flash my system.img backup and run into if that restores the stock boot animation, because nothing else has.

Edit: dd-ing my system.img of my mail-root supersu backup restored my boot blitheness to stock.

Final Edit/Update:
Confirming that this does indeed work. I'yard non certain what exactly I did the get-go fourth dimension, but it completely botched the kick animation.
dd'd organisation.img (I had other compelling reasons to anyway), followed the instructions again, exactly as they are written.
I didn't even extract the naught on PC and then button, I did it all in ES.
The kickoff time I did this I think I had some sort of permission issues (had to delete bootanimation then paste the replacement, couldn't overwrite), and I suspect that combined with a little user error ruined boot animation. Anyway, thank yous for the guide @DragonFire1024. This is a little affair, but completely worth it, imo.


Very foreign simply glad it worked. You lot can now have just almost any boot animation you can find. Simply supersede the zip in /arrangement/media, give permissions, reboot. Only make certain to have the correct resolution ?
  • #20
Very strange but glad it worked. You tin at present accept merely near any boot blitheness you can find. Simply replace the zip in /organization/media, give permissions, reboot. But brand sure to accept the correct resolution

I still accept no thought where I messed it up. It seems like ES wasn't actually in Root Explorer, it showed the permissions as being set, but they definitely weren't.
Was weird that I could delete so paste bootanimation in /bin but not overwrite.

Of course, right afterwards I got this working I used a boot animation that wasn't the right resolution.
I thought 1440p would just look ameliorate, non requite me a bootloop :eek:
I've spent way too much fourth dimension on merely changing the boot animation. :laugh:

Like threads

Source: https://forum.xda-developers.com/t/root-hd-10-customize-your-boot-animation.3810144/

Posted by: danielalmom1995.blogspot.com

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