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MacBook recovery

I have replaced a faulty drive.

I have now have Flashing ?

I try recovery I have no Wi Fi icon

I have no a time machine back.

How do I create a bootable drive?


[Re-Titled by Moderator]

MacBook Pro 13″, macOS 10.15

Posted on Oct 21, 2021 8:15 AM

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Posted on Oct 21, 2021 9:08 AM

Internet Recovery is NOT available in your model’s ROM, so you will need to explore this list of other possibilities.


The way you launched the required Utilities (including Disk Utility and Installer) when your computer was released was to use the ones on the Release software DVD. if you have a model-specific version for your model (unlikely) or a Full Retail 10.6 DVD, you use its Utilities, boot and install that version, then use Software update to get to 10.6.8 with all updates, which is the version that can reach out to the Mac App store and download and install a later version. 10.11 El Capitan is a recommended waypoint, even if you expect to install a later version, because it has an improved Mac App Store that makes getting later versions much easier.


The next source of Utilities is the Recovery Partition on the boot drive. If your drive spins up, even if not MacOS bootable, it may still have a usable recovery partition. To get there, try invoking recovery with Command-R or hold Alt/Option at startup and see if the recovery partition shows as a potentially bootable drive.


The next source of Utilities to consider is any MacOS 10.6 or later versions on any additional drives or clones you may (or may not) have lying about, even if they are from another Mac. You can use those Utilities to ERASE a new drive, and start the installer to place MacOS on the new drive.


The next source to consider is a Time Machine backup drive. Versions from 10.7.3 or later are said to contain a Recovery Partition that could be used to ERASE a new drive and run Installer to place MacOS on a new drive.


IF you have a different Mac, you can use it to download MacOS install image, then interrupt the process and create a BOOTABLE USB-stick Installer/Utilities stick. BOOTABLE is key, because the way you will install from this USB-Stick is to BOOT the USB-stick, and use its Utilities to ERASE your drive and start the Installer. here is the article on bootable USB-Stick Utilities/Installer:


What you need to create a bootable installer

• A USB flash drive or other secondary volume formatted as Mac OS Extended, with at least 14GB of available storage

• A downloaded installer for macOS Big Sur, Catalina, Mojave, High Sierra, or El Capitan.

from:

How to create a bootable installer for macOS - Apple Support

https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT201372


NB>> if you name your incoming USB stick exactly MyVolume, you can copy and paste the very long Terminal command from the article directly into the Terminal window, without having to change anything.

12 replies
Question marked as Best reply

Oct 21, 2021 9:08 AM in response to VinceLarkin

Internet Recovery is NOT available in your model’s ROM, so you will need to explore this list of other possibilities.


The way you launched the required Utilities (including Disk Utility and Installer) when your computer was released was to use the ones on the Release software DVD. if you have a model-specific version for your model (unlikely) or a Full Retail 10.6 DVD, you use its Utilities, boot and install that version, then use Software update to get to 10.6.8 with all updates, which is the version that can reach out to the Mac App store and download and install a later version. 10.11 El Capitan is a recommended waypoint, even if you expect to install a later version, because it has an improved Mac App Store that makes getting later versions much easier.


The next source of Utilities is the Recovery Partition on the boot drive. If your drive spins up, even if not MacOS bootable, it may still have a usable recovery partition. To get there, try invoking recovery with Command-R or hold Alt/Option at startup and see if the recovery partition shows as a potentially bootable drive.


The next source of Utilities to consider is any MacOS 10.6 or later versions on any additional drives or clones you may (or may not) have lying about, even if they are from another Mac. You can use those Utilities to ERASE a new drive, and start the installer to place MacOS on the new drive.


The next source to consider is a Time Machine backup drive. Versions from 10.7.3 or later are said to contain a Recovery Partition that could be used to ERASE a new drive and run Installer to place MacOS on a new drive.


IF you have a different Mac, you can use it to download MacOS install image, then interrupt the process and create a BOOTABLE USB-stick Installer/Utilities stick. BOOTABLE is key, because the way you will install from this USB-Stick is to BOOT the USB-stick, and use its Utilities to ERASE your drive and start the Installer. here is the article on bootable USB-Stick Utilities/Installer:


What you need to create a bootable installer

• A USB flash drive or other secondary volume formatted as Mac OS Extended, with at least 14GB of available storage

• A downloaded installer for macOS Big Sur, Catalina, Mojave, High Sierra, or El Capitan.

from:

How to create a bootable installer for macOS - Apple Support

https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT201372


NB>> if you name your incoming USB stick exactly MyVolume, you can copy and paste the very long Terminal command from the article directly into the Terminal window, without having to change anything.

Oct 22, 2021 4:35 PM in response to ku4hx

The prohibitory (no entry) sign says that the drive you selected appeared to be bootable, but on actually booting, a major component was damaged or missing or not compatible. Boot up can not proceed.


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The drive created by createinstallmedia commands should be on a USB thumb drive. If you did it right, the thumb drive will be ready to be an installer-DVD-equivalent on a thumb drive, which you can boot from and install onto a "real" drive.


common problems include:

• giving the incoming thumb drive a name other than MyVolume, which forces you to have to edit the Terminal command in two places and get it absolutely perfect.

• not copying the ENTIRE command-line, which sprawls over two lines of the article

• attempting to manually type the command, and making one tiny mistake such as dropping a required space


Best results are obtained by naming your incoming thumb drive exactly MyVolume, then select the ENTIRE command from the article and PASTE it to the command-line in an Open Terminal Window.

MacBook recovery

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