And I was right to.ĭownload A33-MTABL-iNet-1024×600-gsl圆80_d71-android4.4.2-20150720-test-keys.rar, but it is very hard to find out what the right file is for a given system.
![allwinner a33 tablet firmware download allwinner a33 tablet firmware download](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/Gw2kzqi_Tb8/hq720.jpg)
#Allwinner a33 tablet firmware download android
Might be able to use Android 4.4.2 or something and then update? Maybe? Possibly? Dunno, I have avoided Android up until now. Mobo says ALONG AL-A33-86VM-V2.0 then R09 2016.09.24.īut it is hard to figure out which firmware image to use for this. Maybe open the case and take a look at the board?Īnyway, turns out the PNDP60M7BLK small Pendo Pad computer, Android 6.0.1, is A33 Quad Core GC213BA 6CX2 from AllWinner Tech: “the Allwinner A33 has quad-core Cortex-A7 processor and a dual-core Mali-400 MP2 GPU” ( ). Website has version 4.4.2, where tablet was running 6.0.1… WTF?Īlso, the 972 is very different in size form this…must be misidentified, or is the same apart from the screensize. Get the tablet that should be off and charged up, now press volume up button and while still holding volume up connect the tablet to the PC by the USB, now press the power button repeatedly about ten times while counting at a normal pace or once every second (Keep holding volume up) the tablet should go into download mode.” But I have a Windows 7 VM on that Linux box, so booted that up and, lo and behold, I have a device called ‘Onda V972 tablet in flash mode’. Checked using gparted, and no unmounted volumes or anything. This follows from this post which describes things that temporarily seemed to fix things only for them to get worse.įollowing, I held down ‘volume up’, then plugged into a Linux box and pressed ‘power’ every second for 10 seconds… nothing. I know I should not judge Android by these cheap no-name tablets from generic suppliers, but it’s hard not to. You may find the links below some help in pursuing your own fixes, but I could not make it work.