Some 10.5-inch iPad Pro users stuck in reboot loop after iPadOS 13.4.1
A number of 10.5-inch iPad Pro users are complaining about devices constantly rebooting and making them effectively useless, an issue that surfaced in recent weeks following the release of updates for iPadOS 13.4.1 and iPadOS 13.5.
A selection of posts on Apple's Support Community pages reveals there is an unusual problem affecting some owners of the iPad Pro. Users are reporting an issue where their tablet will reboot a short time after logging in to the device, sometimes within seconds of signing in.
One post from May 7 claims a 10.5-inch iPad Pro reboots between 30 seconds and 45 seconds after logging in, "even if no apps are running." The user claims the issue started after upgrading the tablet to iPadOS 13.4.1.
Another post from April 10 indicates the same sort of problem, with an identical model of iPad Pro "constantly rebooting" following the upgrade from iPadOS 13.3.1 to 13.4.1. A complaint from May 23 claims it's happening on an 11-inch iPad Pro, but with reboots every ten minutes, indicating it affects more iPad Pro models than just the 10.5-inch variant.
On May 12, user "weechuan" claimed they had the same problem with a 10.5-inch iPad Pro, where it freezes then reboots, but had attempted to get assistance from Apple's chat support twice from the device. While they were offered a phone number to call, they didn't proceed further due to a frustrating verification process.
AppleInsider's searches of the forums and discussions with service personnel suggest there is an issue that originated from iPadOS 13.4.1, and that it is still affecting new users. The latest post on the subject was posted on May 29, which points to it being an unpatched problem.
Another post from May 12 also suggests that a factory restore may not necessarily work for some users. The post's author claims they went through the factory restore process twice to test if restoring personal data is a cause, only to determine it wasn't and declaring "it's the update."
Following discussions with service personnel, the flaw has not been conclusively proven to be solely caused by the operating system updates and not some underlying hardware failure exacerbated by the update. It also doesn't appear to be manifesting on any other iPad Pro model.
It is unclear if Apple is officially working on a fix for the issue, though it is also unknown what actually causes it to manifest for a relatively small number of users and not the iPad Pro population at large. So far, interim advice ahead of a patch seems to revolve around putting the iPad Pro through a hard reset procedure before it reboots, to try and escape the reboot loop.
On iPad Pro models from 2018 onward, the procedure involves pressing and releasing the volume up button, immediately pressing and releasing the volume down button, then pressing and holding the power button at the top. Rather than using the Slide to Power Off button, users must instead continue to hold the power button releasing only when the Apple logo appears onscreen.
A selection of posts on Apple's Support Community pages reveals there is an unusual problem affecting some owners of the iPad Pro. Users are reporting an issue where their tablet will reboot a short time after logging in to the device, sometimes within seconds of signing in.
One post from May 7 claims a 10.5-inch iPad Pro reboots between 30 seconds and 45 seconds after logging in, "even if no apps are running." The user claims the issue started after upgrading the tablet to iPadOS 13.4.1.
Another post from April 10 indicates the same sort of problem, with an identical model of iPad Pro "constantly rebooting" following the upgrade from iPadOS 13.3.1 to 13.4.1. A complaint from May 23 claims it's happening on an 11-inch iPad Pro, but with reboots every ten minutes, indicating it affects more iPad Pro models than just the 10.5-inch variant.
On May 12, user "weechuan" claimed they had the same problem with a 10.5-inch iPad Pro, where it freezes then reboots, but had attempted to get assistance from Apple's chat support twice from the device. While they were offered a phone number to call, they didn't proceed further due to a frustrating verification process.
AppleInsider's searches of the forums and discussions with service personnel suggest there is an issue that originated from iPadOS 13.4.1, and that it is still affecting new users. The latest post on the subject was posted on May 29, which points to it being an unpatched problem.
Another post from May 12 also suggests that a factory restore may not necessarily work for some users. The post's author claims they went through the factory restore process twice to test if restoring personal data is a cause, only to determine it wasn't and declaring "it's the update."
Following discussions with service personnel, the flaw has not been conclusively proven to be solely caused by the operating system updates and not some underlying hardware failure exacerbated by the update. It also doesn't appear to be manifesting on any other iPad Pro model.
It is unclear if Apple is officially working on a fix for the issue, though it is also unknown what actually causes it to manifest for a relatively small number of users and not the iPad Pro population at large. So far, interim advice ahead of a patch seems to revolve around putting the iPad Pro through a hard reset procedure before it reboots, to try and escape the reboot loop.
On iPad Pro models from 2018 onward, the procedure involves pressing and releasing the volume up button, immediately pressing and releasing the volume down button, then pressing and holding the power button at the top. Rather than using the Slide to Power Off button, users must instead continue to hold the power button releasing only when the Apple logo appears onscreen.
Comments
Fast forward 2 days later:
I've watched a bunch of YouTube videos, read many web pages on how to get out of it. I've gotten the phone into recovery mode, hooked it up to my MBA with Mojave, updated firmware, no success. I bit the bullet and gave up everything stored on my phone and did restore: It seemingly worked: I got the white Hello screen, went through full set up, then about 5 minutes into feeling good about getting my life back together, it abruptly shut off and the boot loop problem came back.
I've gone through this process a few times and it keeps coming back. I've tried zipping through the install screens and doing a normal shut down. Didn't work. I've tried this with and without the SIM card in. No difference.
I'm amidst another novel approach:
I updated one of my Macs to Catalina and tried restoring again using the "new" way MacOS syncs with the iPhone (ie not using iTunes). It's been about 20 minutes and the phone still hasn't gone back to the boot loop.
This article was the first I'd seen online with this problem on an iPhone XS Max.
Don’t be a beta tester, even when software/updates aren’t technically beta. Delay updates for 2 weeks. It wouldn’t help in this case, but it’s a good rule of thumb.
2nd
The problem sounds like a driver issue... that’s causing a problem in memory. There must be a very specific hardware component (version or versions) that is shared between the different iPads experiencing the problem.
Unfortunately, this isn’t likely to be solved by people working remotely from home, because of the coronavirus.
mytechnomaster said:
That’s all I have to say, really.