# How to Bypass Your A12 Device With iAldaz (FOR FREE!)

iAldaz’s A12 Activator is here, and for a limited time it’s completely free! Here’s how you can bypass your device today.

# Requirements

* Physical access to the device you want to bypass. The device must be on iOS 17.0 - 26.0.1.
    
* A stable Wi-Fi connection. Using a mobile hotspot is not advised.
    
* A lightning or USB-C cable (depending on your phone model).
    
* A copy of the tool. You can download the tool [here](https://adfly.site/iAldazA12).
    

# The Bypass

1. Launch the activator and plug in your device. Give the tool a second, and when it says your device is supported you can proceed to the next step.
    
2. Go to [this](https://adfly.site/iAldazReg) web-page and submit your serial number. If you get a message on the screen saying “XXX processed successfully”, you’re now ready for the bypass!
    
3. Make sure your device is connected to a stable Wi-Fi network, go back to the activator, plug in your device and hit Activate. The device will now restart a few times while the tool works its magic. After each reboot, all you need to do is make sure the device is connected to Wi-Fi as fast as possible or the bypass will fail.
    
4. There you go, your device will be bypassed!
    

# My Experience With The Bypass

Overall, my experience was pretty smooth. Despite the servers being overloaded, I was able to bypass my device. Despite the tool saying that the bypass failed, I noticed my device had become activated so I just chalk that one up to a bug. The device runs really smoothly, which now makes me wonder why my device was so slow after I bypassed the same exact phone with iRemoval a couple of days ago. The UI of the application is really clean, and actually a UI I quite enjoy.

# The Drawbacks to this Tool

There are a few. This tool is awesome, but definitely still needs some work. For one, the only way to sign into iCloud on a device bypassed with this tool is to restore a backup from a device that’s signed into the account you want to sign into. While I was able to sign into the App Store, app downloads took a suspiciously long time, and even then I could only download apps I had already purchased. I tried seeing if I could login to iCloud using the proxy for iRemoveTools, but that didn’t work. I didn’t test the proxies of Mina and iRemovalPro, however.

# Conclusion

While the tool is awesome and the device runs smoothly, I think I still currently prefer iRemoveTools. iRemoveTools is incredibly stable and well built, and until we get a proper proxy for Aldaz I think iRemoveTools remains better for a Mac. Things are always changing, however!

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