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Topic: Please Help: 2BTC locked because "The password did not unlock the wallet" - page 2. (Read 6940 times)

legendary
Activity: 2604
Merit: 1036
Thank you very much this guide just helped me take my Bitcoins out of this broken piece of shit software called the Multibit wallet. The wrong password bug happened to me as well. Thanks a bunch for providing such a helpful workaround!
newbie
Activity: 1
Merit: 0
awesome, thank you so much it worked! You're a hero!
  Cheesy
legendary
Activity: 2772
Merit: 2846
newbie
Activity: 8
Merit: 0
Pfff... Thanks man! It worked. I've sent them back to MultiBit Classic. It has been stable for at least the 2.5 years I've been using it. The transaction has not been confirmed yet, but I think the confirmation will follow soon.

My conclusion is that as long as we do not know the cause of the password problem, MultiBit HD is not a serious application for any amounts of Bitcoin above $50. Let's face it:

MultBit encourages me to upgrade from MultiBit Classic to MultiBit HD because it's supposed to be safer.

- I follow all the migration instructions
- I've got 2BTC
- I've got my wallet words
- I've got my password 100% for sure
- My PC is well maintained, protected and free of viruses

Yet:

- MultiBit HD refuses to open my wallet
- MultiBit refuses to restore my wallet from backups. Not even on an other device
- This problem has been described over a year ago, yet it still seems to be a bug (?)

It felt like a back-stab to me. Not hackers, but MultiBit HD has "stolen" my Bitcoin (I think). My computer knowledge is above average. I've been using password protection since the nineties, using several applications, without a problem. I usually manage to solve computer problems, sometimes with some help from the Internet Community. But this even scared me. For many people solving this problem will be too complicated. As long as end-users have to use crypto-technology to get their Bitcoins back, Bitcoin will never become a main stream currency.

Also, a 32-Bit version of MultiBit HD is very difficult to find, while many people use cheap laptops with 32-bit Windows versions these days. No more MultiBit HD for me!

Anyhow, thanks again. You saved 2016 for me. Happy new year!  Smiley





legendary
Activity: 2772
Merit: 2846

Do you have any idea why MultiBit can't open my wallet?


Sorry I don't know why, it sounds like a bug.



With password you mean the 12 wallet words?


Yes




How can I use my extended private key and a list of receiving addresses for my wallet to open my locked wallet? Can you explain this step-by-step?


Use the webpage I linked to in my earlier post. After you have entered your 12 wallet words into it and put m/0'/0  in the BIP32 Derivation Path box the page should automatically display the addresses in your multibit HD wallet together with their private keys.

You should be able to see them about half way down the page below the big heading that says "Derived Addresses".

If you know which address contains your Bitcoins you need to copy the private key shown next to that address.

If you don't know which address contains your Bitcoins then open the blockchain.info link below and starting at the top of the list search blockchain.info for each Bitcoin address in your list until you find the one containing your coins.

Don't let blockchain.info or anyone else know any of your private keys

https://blockchain.info/

After you find which of your Bitcoin addresses contains your Bitcoins copy its private key, then follow these steps.

Download electrum 2.6.4 portable from here (because the latest 2.7 versions are buggy).

https://download.electrum.org/2.6.4/electrum-2.6.4-portable.exe

Create a new folder and copy electrum-2.6.4-portable.exe into it, then double click it to start the wallet.

An install wizard window should open. At the top of it select the "Restore a wallet or import keys" option, then click the "next" button.

Another window will open with a box in it that you can type your private key into.

After that click the "next" button and another series of windows should open. Leave each window's settings as they are and click the "next" button in each one until the wallet opens.

You can leave the password boxes blank, the electrum wallet can work without a password, and its password is not the same as your multibit wallet's password.

When the wallet opens it should sync within minutes and show your Bitcoins. You can use it to send them wherever you like.

newbie
Activity: 8
Merit: 0
Thanks for your help!


Put the text below in the BIP32 Derivation Path box.

m/0'/0

Type your password into the BIP39 Mnemonic box.


With password you mean the 12 wallet words?


The page should automatically generate your extended private key and a list of receiving addresses  for your wallet.


How can I use my extended private key and a list of receiving addresses for my wallet to open my locked wallet? Can you explain this step-by-step? This is complicated stuff for me.... Do you have any idea why MultiBit can't open my wallet?

legendary
Activity: 2772
Merit: 2846
Thanks for your reply, but what do you mean with "seed"?

Did you try importing your seed into electrum? I think multibit and electrum use the same type of seed. Good thing you stored the seed safely, do not panic your coins are not lost. Do not share the seed with anyone. Download electrum and try importing your seed in there.

Jacob

He means the the wallet words you used when you created your multibit HD wallet. The wallet words are the seed.

I tried importing my multibit HD seed into electrum, but it wouldn't let me import them until I clicked the options button, then checked "BIP39 seed". Although electrum create a wallet using my multibit HD words it didn't show the same addresses as in my multibit HD wallet. Either I did something wrong, or that technique doesn't work.



This might be why the technique didn't work

http://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/20174/export-wallet-from-multibit-to-electrum

Quote
Multibit creates addresses using compressed private key, while Electrum uses uncompressed private keys. You can't decompress key - it will change public address, not allowing you to use your coins.
legendary
Activity: 2772
Merit: 2846
I successfully tried generating a wallet in multibit HD and retrieving its extended private key using an offline copy of the webpage linked below.

https://iancoleman.github.io/bip39/

Once you have the extended private key you can use it to get your Bitcoins back by importing it into a blockchain.info wallet. The page also shows a list of private keys for each address in an HD wallet,  and you can import them into electrum or some other wallet to access your Bitcoins.

To use the webpage right click the link and choose save as , then press enter.

Open it offline in your browser, then click the BIP32 tab below the big Derivation Path heading.

Put the text below in the BIP32 Derivation Path box.

m/0'/0

Type your password seed into the BIP39 Mnemonic box.

The page should automatically generate your extended private key and a list of receiving addresses  for your wallet.

If your Bitcoins are in a change address then repeat the steps above, but type the text below in the BIP32 Derivation Path box.

m/0'/1  

The page should show you all your change addresses with their private keys.

If aren't sure if that webpage is trustworthy it was recommended by a respected member of bitcointalk called dooglus who's a clamcoin dev, and runs a well known dice site. This is the post which he recommended it in.

https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.12270560

You can also scan it at the virus scanner link below to check if it's safe.

https://virustotal.com

The only reason I said to run it offline was to be extra safe. It's possible to use it online. but less secure.
newbie
Activity: 8
Merit: 0
Thanks for your reply, but what do you mean with "seed"?

Did you try importing your seed into electrum? I think multibit and electrum use the same type of seed. Good thing you stored the seed safely, do not panic your coins are not lost. Do not share the seed with anyone. Download electrum and try importing your seed in there.

Jacob
sr. member
Activity: 364
Merit: 250
Did you try importing your seed into electrum? I think multibit and electrum use the same type of seed. Good thing you stored the seed safely, do not panic your coins are not lost. Do not share the seed with anyone. Download electrum and try importing your seed in there.

Jacob
newbie
Activity: 8
Merit: 0
Today I migrated from MultiBit Classic to MultiBit HD 0.4.1. I received my 2BTC, so I thought everything was fine ... untill ... I restarted MultiBit HD.

After login in with my password i get "The password did not unlock the wallet".

- I checked the password with "I have forgotten my password" option and my password is 100% correct.
- I also tried to recover my wallet from the last backup with the wallet words. The wallet words are verified but after what seems to be a successful recovery, I get the same message "The password did not unlock the wallet".
- I also tried to recover my wallet from older backups, but this did not work either.
- I tried to download lighthouse, which should be compatible with MultiBit wallets and wallet words, but the site is down.
- I tried to recover my wallet on a 32-bit laptop, using a 32 bit version of Multibit HD (which was difficult to find BTW) but I get the same error: "The password did not unlock the wallet".

Note that my backup folder is on an encrypted TrueCrypt disk. The original wallet is just on my C:\\ drive. I keep the backups on a TrueCrypt disk to keep my files in one place and for easy backup purposes. I never had problems with encrypted disks though. They work just like any other disk. It worked with MultiBit Classic too.

I'm kind of panicking now. It's a lot of money locked in  Cry  This issue is described in some older threads, but apparently it is not solved?

https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/multibit-hd-013-password-no-longer-valid-1205068
https://github.com/keepkey/multibit-hd/issues/765
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