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One of the most requested features. This tool can remove Google account verification on Android devices running Android 7 to Android 13, provided the device has a Qualcomm processor. It works via EDL mode without needing a USB debugging toggle.

The tool includes modules for the removal of Factory Reset Protection (FRP), a security feature designed to deter theft.

One of the most common errors in EDL is the "Sahara Fail" or "Firehose handshake failure." v3.0 introduces a retry logic with variable packet sizes to circumvent these errors on locked bootloaders.

Qualcomm Tool Master v3.0 officially supports:

| Chipset Family | Supported SoCs | | :--- | :--- | | Snapdragon 8 Gen 1/2 | SM8450, SM8550 | | Snapdragon 888/888+ | SM8350 | | Snapdragon 865/870 | SM8250 | | Snapdragon 7 Series | SM7450, SM7350, SM7150 | | Snapdragon 6 Series | SM6125, SM6225 | | Legacy (4xx / 6xx) | MSM8917, MSM8940, MSM8953 |

Brands: Xiaomi, Samsung (A/M/F series Qualcomm variants), OnePlus, Realme, Oppo, Vivo, LG, Motorola, ZTE, and Nokia.

Note: Does NOT support Mediatek (MTK), Exynos, or Tensor chips.


The Android ecosystem is predominantly powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon System-on-Chips (SoCs). These chipsets manage device operations through a complex boot chain involving the Primary Bootloader (PBL), Secondary Bootloader, and the operating system kernel. When this chain is disrupted—resulting in a "hard brick"—standard software repair methods fail.

Qualcomm Tool Master v3.0 emerges as a third-party solution designed to interface directly with the SoC’s low-level protocols. Unlike standard Android Debug Bridge (ADB) tools, which operate within the OS layer, Tool Master v3.0 functions primarily in the Emergency Download Mode (EDL) or Qualcomm Download (QDLoader 9008) state. This paper delineates the technical capabilities of the tool, its role in the repair industry, and the underlying protocols it leverages to manipulate non-volatile memory (NVM).

For repair shops: You can now queue up to five phones. The tool flashes one, ejects it, and moves to the next automatically.


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Qualcomm Tool Master V3.0 Guide

One of the most requested features. This tool can remove Google account verification on Android devices running Android 7 to Android 13, provided the device has a Qualcomm processor. It works via EDL mode without needing a USB debugging toggle.

The tool includes modules for the removal of Factory Reset Protection (FRP), a security feature designed to deter theft.

One of the most common errors in EDL is the "Sahara Fail" or "Firehose handshake failure." v3.0 introduces a retry logic with variable packet sizes to circumvent these errors on locked bootloaders. qualcomm tool master v3.0

Qualcomm Tool Master v3.0 officially supports:

| Chipset Family | Supported SoCs | | :--- | :--- | | Snapdragon 8 Gen 1/2 | SM8450, SM8550 | | Snapdragon 888/888+ | SM8350 | | Snapdragon 865/870 | SM8250 | | Snapdragon 7 Series | SM7450, SM7350, SM7150 | | Snapdragon 6 Series | SM6125, SM6225 | | Legacy (4xx / 6xx) | MSM8917, MSM8940, MSM8953 | One of the most requested features

Brands: Xiaomi, Samsung (A/M/F series Qualcomm variants), OnePlus, Realme, Oppo, Vivo, LG, Motorola, ZTE, and Nokia.

Note: Does NOT support Mediatek (MTK), Exynos, or Tensor chips. Note: Does NOT support Mediatek (MTK), Exynos, or


The Android ecosystem is predominantly powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon System-on-Chips (SoCs). These chipsets manage device operations through a complex boot chain involving the Primary Bootloader (PBL), Secondary Bootloader, and the operating system kernel. When this chain is disrupted—resulting in a "hard brick"—standard software repair methods fail.

Qualcomm Tool Master v3.0 emerges as a third-party solution designed to interface directly with the SoC’s low-level protocols. Unlike standard Android Debug Bridge (ADB) tools, which operate within the OS layer, Tool Master v3.0 functions primarily in the Emergency Download Mode (EDL) or Qualcomm Download (QDLoader 9008) state. This paper delineates the technical capabilities of the tool, its role in the repair industry, and the underlying protocols it leverages to manipulate non-volatile memory (NVM).

For repair shops: You can now queue up to five phones. The tool flashes one, ejects it, and moves to the next automatically.