Seems people are getting confused with hard drive passwords and BIOS passwords. If the password is on the hard drive, these methods wont help. In fact, your options are very very few if its a hard drive password. For BIOS passwords, removing the battery fixes 90% of them.
toshiba crack bios hard drive password utility
Download Zip: https://jinyurl.com/2vKLRT
ok im a novice user but i found the best solution for toshiba laptops with bios password set (and lost obiosly) what i did was remove the cmos battery and let it reset until it ask for the date and time again but very important step when the promp ask you reset defaults or or enter setup do alt ctrl delete and boot using a usb floppy drive with a windows 98 floppy and bingo good to go hope this information helps anyone out there with the same problem mssage me for any questions crazy thing is i tried everything hex floppy and parralel key all failed ..
ok i have seen dell inspiron 1501 laptops on here a few times. i am helping a friend. and noticed that no one has answered the call. there is no disket drive. this model comes with a rightable dvd drive put i notice he does not have it. so no cd or disk drive will work. witch leaves usb. i did remove the nickel size battery on the mother board it is under the keyboard easy, carefully popped the cover over the power button/hinges and unscrewed the keyboard and poped it out of place. pushed battery carefully to the heavy side of the plastic and lift and it fell out of place. anyway i called dell and they charge. i have been reading googled. and found out they give you a maser password from the information that comes written on your laptop. i would use a software to crack it except the few i found are questionable at best or charge. there are no jumbers to reset and leave very few options to recover from any of the bois password lock outs. i am not paying the fellow if i mess this up so shorting out anything is out of the question. i get that idiots out there steal and such. so i guess if i am to get the answer i have to pay and pass the buck or let go of this one. my puplic email is snowcatman@yahoo.com
The fix. Easy and it always works. Cd rom and HD in laptop remove the HD and using a external HD case 20 bucks put the HD in that connect it to USB and boot pc Now you can boot from cd cuz hard drive is not present (we moved it to USB HD ) now when you install the os to your external HD you might get a error during second part of install this is suppost to happen b.s.0.dsimply put your HD back in laptop and reboot now you can finish the second half of xp installation and the bios dose not need to be unlocked cuz your os boots fine. I just did this with a travelmate 5520 and it worked like a dream
Hi, i am using dell inspiron 1300, whenever i power on the system an error message come which says that there is no boot device. I try to format the system but i am not able to do that since the default boot order menu is internal hard disk, i try to set it to cd drive but it says that it is password protected. I need to remove the password, i follow your instruction to remove the cmos battery, i unplugged the battery from the system board for about an hour, when i start the system again the date and time section load to default but the password protection is still there.
hi i have few suggestions on all of these matters first of all bios password removing is almost impossible in most cases because we are not all expert programmer when i had a problem with one of the laptops i used a program called bios password remover had to be used on boot up which i think is the best way to crack a bios password but in one of the laptops it crashed it i took it to a repair shop they told me it is not fixable anymore then i took it home taken it a part i took out the processor chip and turn on the laptop it made few noises i turned it off and put back the processor chip back and turned it on again guess what no bios password and laptop is still working still i wont advice anyone to do all that unless you are willing to lose your laptop for good lets get back to the windows password there is few ways i know how to bypass that it is all tryed and tested on lots of laptops so i am talking from experience1.if you are worried about loosing your stuff on the hard disk take it of then plug it in external reader which costs around 8 pounds transfer all your files at another computer then put your hard drive back and install new windows on it here you go2. you can install windows vista if your system is capable vista keeps your files on place called an old windows get your files out re-format with any windows you want format all old windows so they dont keep extra space on your hard drive this works with windows 7 is welli hope this helps
For those models that do have the Supervisor Password feature, some models provide access to it through the BIOS Setup program. For these models, see the steps above for setting the BIOS password. For other models, there may be a link to the Supervisor Program in Toshiba Utilities, or there may be a Supervisor Password utility program in the Toshiba folder on the hard disk drive. On newer models this utility is called SVPW32.EXE, and is located in the folderC:\PROGRAM FILES\TOSHIBA\WINDOWS UTILITIES\SVPWTOOL. See the README file in this folder for further instructions.
On older computers you can find the supervisor program either on the Companion Diskette under 'Password', or by running the utility program SVPW utility from the C:\DOS directory on the hard drive. Both methods permit setting a Supervisor password, and will prompt for it to be entered a second time for verification. Once a Supervisor password is set, it will be necessary to enter it whenever the computer is started, restarted or reset.
Once Dell Support has provided the reset password, you enter this when prompted and then press Ctrl + Enter to complete the process. The reset hard drive password will automatically clear the hard drive password.
If the computer responds with the message Invalid Password, press the Enter key and continue to enter the same password three more times. After the fourth attempt the BIOS should accept the reset password, clear the password, and allow access to the hard drive.
Computers with M.2 SATA drives support hard drive passwords with the SATA Operation BIOS setting Enabled. Should the SATA Operation BIOS setting be disabled (Figure 9), the computer will no longer have hard drive password support. This is working by design as the function is only supported with the SATA Operation Enabled.
When a hard drive password is configured within the Security section of the Latitude BIOS. An external USB keyboard may not be recognized at the password prompt when the laptop is booting. This issue has been reported when the laptop is either docked or when the keyboard is plugged into the external USB port on the Latitude E5440 and E7270. This may occur on other Latitude laptop models.
When clearing a hard drive password with Dell's Client Configuration Toolkit (CCTK). The computer prompts the user to confirm the change by selecting either "Modify" or "Ignore" (Figure 11):Figure 11: CCTK HDD Password Removal Prompt
Dell Command Configure fails to set a hard drive password on a Latitude laptop and receives the following error: "The option-related BIOS information is not available in this machine." The hard drive password can be set manually in the system BIOS settings of the laptop.
A problem has been identified in Dell Command Configure 3.0 where the hard drive password is unable to be set or modified in the user interface. The Dell Command Configure 3.0 command-line interface can still be used to complete this function.
Easy job, just removed the bios password on my toshiba satellite L450d-12x, to do so remove Ram cover and Ram modules, then carefully remove label from motherboard underneath where the ram was, there is a 5mm square copper bit that if u look carefully is 2 pieces arranged into a square (it's labelled J1) u just need to short these two pieces together, I used a small flathead screwdriver but it is lacquered so I had to scratch it slightly to get a good connection. Also make sure u remove battery and charger first and hold down power button for 20 seconds to drain any excess charge. Good luck everyone!
Wow everybody wants to get so complicated re-flashing EPROMs and what not before they have all the facts. Has anybody considered the hard drive, SATA has been password locked? If that's the case, toss the drive and install a new one. Don't waste your time trying to hack your way in, unless there is a very specific reason you want access to that data if that's the case hire a forensics team to recover the drive. Its really not that complicated. If it's bios lockout, pull the batterys for half an hour. if it's not a windows lockout, then it's a sata pw lockout.
Well I have the L775D Toshiba satellite, I removed the main & the cmos battery to, waited over an hour, and even removed the ram chips, then removed the hard drive, after the hour had past put it all back together like (humor dumpty ), so keeping my fingers crossed pushed power button wishing & praying it would turn on, but u think it did, he'll no still got screen that says enter password !! And yes even tried it again but to no avail it failed like totally sucks. So I will keep trying, will try the backdoor password codes maybe I'll get lucky ! ..Who knows. But if not working by the end of days I guarantee you I will Nuke its ass seriously
However, this is often not true. Most people are not aware that most hard disk drives have the ability to set a hardware password, just like the Bios password for motherboards, thus making the drive completely inaccessible unless a correct password is provided during the BIOS POST test. Usually these features can only be found in laptops, this is when you set a password on your notebook, the hard drive together with the motherboard becomes locked. All software tested and works on Seagate, Hitachi, Toshiba and Western Digital Hard Drive HDD and SSD. 2ff7e9595c
Comments