jjarmo wrote:
use Apple Store and download High Sierra. I did do bootable installer "Create a bootable installer for macOS - Apple Support" and start installation. SAME result. It starts fine, reboot 35min, 30min.. and Calculating time! 6hours I did wait nothing happens.
Sounds like you likely have a hardware issue of some sort. Most likely the internal hard drive is failing.
You can try running the Apple Diagnostics to see if any hardware issues are detected, but the diagnostics rarely find issues even when they are confirmed to exist through other tests.
If you can boot into macOS, then you can also try running DriveDx (free trial period) to check the health of the hard drive. Feel free to post the complete text report here using the "Additional Text" icon which looks like a piece of paper on the forum editing toolbar.
2GB partition has High Sierra, 2TB HDD has High Sierra and my 32GB USB has High Sierra. iMAC does not start any of them. I did try Recover, NOW iMAC is totally lost - Utility is only thing opening and seem working. Net install (Reinstall macOS) says no connection to server.
Unfortunately it is not uncommon to have issues with Internet Recovery Mode. Besides the typical networking related issues most people encounter, there have been more reports of Apple's servers not always being available to actually install older versions of macOS even once booted into Internet Recovery Mode.
Since 2GB partition is now High Sierra, Disk utility has lost ability to Restore anything from USB. At the beginning I did make Recovery to USB from Lion - but I cant use it!
I would not put much faith into any instructions for creating a bootable macOS 10.7 Lion USB stick, or even 10.8 Mountain Lion since these installers were not designed by Apple for becoming a USB installer. Any instructions are just hacks which may or may not work to some extent. I tried one for macOS 10.11 El Capitan once & I had mixed results with it.
I've never tried the suggestion by @Grant.
What do you mean by 2GB partition? You need more than a 2GB partition/volume for even a macOS USB installer.
My conclusion is: iMac Core i7 27" Mid-2011 16GB RAM EMC 2429 IS NOT compatible with High Sierra, NOT even with Sierra. It should be! Actually it SHOULD be with Catalina!
macOS 10.15 Catalina is not supported on a 2011 iMac.
I can see that macOS 10.13 High Sierra may have more issues than macOS 10.11 El Capitan because High Sierra is likely using the new APFS file system which is much harder on a hard drive. In fact, the macOS installer will start with the MacOS Extended (Journaled) file system and convert it to the APFS file system (unless it doesn't use APFS for a hard drive).....this occurs even when erasing the drive with the APFS file system. Plus macOS High Sierra may be utilizing the hardware a bit differently than an older OS such as El Capitan which is why you are seemingly only having issues with High Sierra.
And if the problems are getting worse the more you try to reinstall macOS over & over, it makes it even more likely that you have a failing hard drive whose failure is getting worse very quickly from intense use (it was already failing, but these attempts just made it more noticeable). Of course there could be some other hardware issue as well, but a failing hard drive is the most likely. Memory issues is another, although with a 2011 iMac a bad GPU is also a possibility although I have not really seen anything here that would point to a GPU failure, but I also have not seen a lot of details or error messages encountered for these failures either.
I would avoid Lion at all costs since it is just too old. Start with El Capitan if you can and if successful, then create a bootable macOS 10.13 High Sierra USB installer using the official Apple instructions in the following article:
Create a bootable installer for macOS - Apple Support
Keep in mind Macs can be very picky about the drives & even USB sticks used for booting, plus the quality of USB sticks is extremely poor.
I would even recommend installing macOS to an external USB3 hard drive or SSD to see if you can get High Sierra installed onto the external drive & boot the external drive with the full High Sierra installation. If this works, then it further confirms the likelihood of an internal hard drive failure, however, if the iMac still has trouble booting to the external High Sierra full installation it could still be due to an internal drive failure.