Download ixtreme lt v2 firmware for xbox 360 slim
so no way to boot up XeLL (= no realistic way for you to get the CPU-key atm) and thus no way to swap the KV data in your NAND image.Īnd then there's also added KV protection (hashing) on newer motherboards (Falcon+ ?), but if you can't even get your CPU-key it doesn't matter much to do deeper into this problem. Microsoft patched the JTAG hack since kernel 849x (July 2009). and if you got banned the last few weeks it means you updated to the latest dashboard/kernel (else you can't get on LIVE).Īnd that's the problem. To run XeLL u need to perform the JTAG hack (or the King Kong exploit, but that's even more outdated). you need the (unique) CPU key of your banned console - without it you can't correctly write the new KV data in the NAND bin of your banned console. However there's a (really) big 'IF' (besides the required tech knowledge). While technically very different you could somewhat compare it to swapping eeprom data during the Xbox1 days. Basically you swap the Keyvault (or 'KV' in short, it stores stuff like console certificates, per-box private keys, DVD key, etc) inside the NAND with the KV from an unbanned console. This method has been known for a long time (since the King Kong Exploit days) and does indeed 'work'.
Download ixtreme lt v2 firmware for xbox 360 slim update#
Still, the update relies on free tools provided online, however modders should be aware that both the modded console and the un-modded console cannot access Live at the same time (as both use the same CPU key). Xbox-Scene reports that the fix is somewhat complex and requires the user to have access to the CPU key of a second, un-modded Xbox 360 console. Unfortunately, the workaround isnt simple. The fix may even allow gamers to play backup disks under Microsoft's nose. The new workaround, iXtreme LT (Light Touch), tries to make the altered firmware appear as the original, Microsoft-certified version while keeping the modded information.
However, website 360Mods says different, providing a fix to get those custom consoles back on Live. The latest sweep took out around 600,000 to one million consoles, hunting down modified firmware and locking the units off the network Microsoft said that in order to get back online, modders would need a new Xbox 360 console. Modders recently discovered that their customized Xbox 360 consoles were banned from Microsoft's Xbox Live service.