Allwinner A133 Frp

FRP is a security feature introduced by Google to combat theft. If a device is factory reset via the recovery menu (or wiped) without the owner removing their Google Account first, the device locks down.

Upon reboot, the tablet demands the email and password previously synced to the device. If you bought a used tablet and the seller forgot to remove their account, or if you performed a factory reset and forgot your own credentials, you are now locked out.

The most common failure point in the Allwinner A133 FRP process is the driver. If PhoenixSuit does not recognize your device:

Once you regain access, take these steps to avoid repeating the cycle:

This method exploits a vulnerability in Android’s Settings app that exists on many Allwinner A133 Android 10 and 12 builds. It requires no PC, only patience. Allwinner A133 Frp

Prerequisites:

Step-by-Step Procedure:

Once on the home screen, go to Settings → Accounts → Remove the Google account and then perform a factory reset from the main settings menu to permanently clear the lock.

These tools require a paid license (~$15-$30 per year) but offer a guaranteed solution. FRP is a security feature introduced by Google

Steps for UnlockTool:

  • In UnlockTool, select AllwinnerA133FRP Reset.
  • The tool will send a patched vbmeta and boot image via USB, disabling FRP on the hardware level.
  • The tablet will auto-reboot. FRP is erased permanently (until a new Google account is added).
  • Alternative Free PC Tool: Fastboot Method – Some A133 tablets have an unlocked fastboot. Reboot to fastboot (Volume Down + Power) and run:

    fastboot erase frp
    fastboot reboot
    

    Note: This works only if the OEM unlocking toggle was previously enabled, which is rare.


    Solution: You didn’t fully disable the Setup Wizard. After bypass, immediately go to Settings > Apps > Show system apps > Search “Setup Wizard” > Disable / Force Stop. Then reboot. Step-by-Step Procedure:

    Try these tools (search for "A133 FRP tool"):

    Process typically:

    Cheap tablet sellers exploit this deliberately. They advertise “FRP unlock service” for $5–10, using a Python script that talks directly to the A133’s USB diagnostic endpoint. The same method can, in theory, bypass disk encryption if the device is in preloader mode — a fact never acknowledged by Allwinner’s public errata.