Ginga Force -jtag Rgh- ~upd~ (iPhone SAFE)
The air in the workshop smelled of ozone, soldering flux, and the stale coffee that had been sitting on the server rack for three days.
- Use J-Runner / XeBuild to create a patched NAND with LT+ or custom dash, set correct CPU key and NAND partitioning.
For the dedicated fan, the journey to install Ginga Force on an RGH console is not about circumventing rules—it is about archiving a jewel of digital entertainment. As long as modded 360s exist, the force will indeed be with this galaxy. Ginga Force -Jtag RGH-
- Remove console case and locate CPU, timing points, and CLK or reset lines per board layout.
- Wire glitch chip signals: connect power, ground, and glitch lines (e.g., CPU_SCL, nSTALL/nJTRST, TX/RX if present). Add required capacitors/resistors per guide.
- Solder carefully; verify with multimeter for shorts.
- Dump NAND before powering fully (always keep original dump).
- Program or configure the glitch chip firmware:
3) Required software (collection)
- NAND dumping tools: Memdump, NANDPro, or hardware programmer utilities
- Glitch chip flasher utility (e.g., CoolRunner flasher)
- XeBuild and mkimage for building flashed image
- Chimp, Simple360 NAND Tool, or J-Runner for image building and flashing support
- Custom dashboard: FreeStyle Dash (FGD/FreeStyle), Aurora
- XBR (if needed) and dashlaunch for auto-booting homebrew
- Homebrew apps: FTPD, XeXLoader, MultiMan
- Relevant drivers for your NAND programmer and USB devices