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What to do with iMac A1224 (2008/2009?) I can't log into (missing disk).

Hey all.

I've got my mother's old iMac from around 2008/2009.

She passed away last year and this is one of the artefacts left.

I don't want to keep it but certainly don't want to just trash it.


Unfortunately I can't seem to log in as I have no disks. If I turn it on it goes into this 'Installing MAC Os X' loop (states installing Mac OS X but then advised this isn't possible).


But there might be information/data/photographs on the machine (pretty sure it was never wiped).

Anything I can do to enter the machine? I thought of sticking it on an auction site once I've managed to clear it.

Unlikely there's anything on there I need to retrieve but wouldn't want to give away if it still has data.


Many thanks.

Posted on Nov 18, 2024 7:27 AM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Nov 18, 2024 11:59 AM

Do you have another Mac available? If so, and depending on the age the OS on the other Mac, you may be able to use Target Disk Mode to access the data on the drive without booting from it:


Transfer files between two Mac computers using target disk mode - Apple Support


However, the easiest way for a computer about to be recycled is to physically remove the hard drive. Two benefits:


1—no chance of any data being left in the old computer

2—once removed, you can attach the bare drive to another computer—Mac or Windows—and use a bare drive adapter or a drive dock to acces the data on the drive.


If the computer is damaged while removing the drive, who cares? it's getting recycled anyway. It's too old to be of practical use to a new user today.


Look for videos instructions for removing the drive by web-searching for "remove hard drive 2008-2009 iMac" If it is not something you think you can handle, see if a local computer shop will extractthe drive.

7 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Nov 18, 2024 11:59 AM in response to somapop

Do you have another Mac available? If so, and depending on the age the OS on the other Mac, you may be able to use Target Disk Mode to access the data on the drive without booting from it:


Transfer files between two Mac computers using target disk mode - Apple Support


However, the easiest way for a computer about to be recycled is to physically remove the hard drive. Two benefits:


1—no chance of any data being left in the old computer

2—once removed, you can attach the bare drive to another computer—Mac or Windows—and use a bare drive adapter or a drive dock to acces the data on the drive.


If the computer is damaged while removing the drive, who cares? it's getting recycled anyway. It's too old to be of practical use to a new user today.


Look for videos instructions for removing the drive by web-searching for "remove hard drive 2008-2009 iMac" If it is not something you think you can handle, see if a local computer shop will extractthe drive.

Nov 18, 2024 11:01 AM in response to somapop

Hi, somapop, sorry to hear of your mom’s passing too.. maybe you can install Snow Leopard from a Retail Install DVD of it..unfortunately, unless you know for sure it had 10.7 OSX Lion on it, then a retail copy of Snow Leopard would be an OK option ., if you have one already, use it , if not, maybe buy it … if you think it might have Lion on it, you could try to get to the Recovery partition by rebooting + holding down Apple/cloverleaf/command key + R together on the keyboard as it’s starting up… if you see a language selection screen, then you have one, if not, then snow leopard dvd would be it, otherwise Apple could recycle it for you


John B

Nov 20, 2024 12:44 PM in response to somapop

That model would have shipped from the factory with a macOS Restoration CD/DVD.


If you don't have those discs and all you want to do is securely erase the internal drive, then try creating & using a bootable ShredOS USB stick in order to write zeroes to the whole internal hard drive. You should be able to use the 64bit version:

https://github.com/PartialVolume/shredos.x86_64


If you want to try to recover data from the internal hard drive, then you could try creating & using a bootable Knoppix Linux USB stick. Knoppix has the drivers necessary to access the HFS+ file system, but you will need to connect another external USB drive for saving the recovered items.


You can also try booting the iMac into Recovery Mode using Command + R (perhaps even better is Command + Option + R so that you are not prompted to authenticate with an AppleID which you won't have that will work). If you can boot into Recovery Mode, then try installing macOS to an external drive (you will need to properly erase or even partition & format the external drive using Disk Utility). Then you can boot the iMac from the external drive to see if any personal information remains. Or if you are familiar with the command line, you can check while booted into Recovery Mode.


If you can boot into Recovery Mode, then you can also use Disk Utility to securely erase the internal hard drive. Disk Utility does have an option to secure erase a hard drive by writing zeroes or even random data to the drive (usually a single pass of zeroes is sufficient). This assumes the hard drive is still healthy enough to complete the task.


This all assumes that the internal hard drive is still healthy. More than likely the internal hard drive is worn out or even failing.


Nov 20, 2024 12:02 PM in response to somapop

Thanks all.

I seem to remember a disk not working (self ejecting) some time ago, but I'm not 100%.

May mean the CD drive is damaged.


With the confirmation that this machine won't be of much use to anyone today I feel the best option will be to remove the drive and get this machine recycled.


I'm off work this week so would give me something to do. I did add in extra RAM at one stage so should be good to go with regards to getting in the machine.

Whether I need certain tools for this I'll have to have a search (I moved home recently and a fair bit of stuff got passed on/recycled).


Thanks for the helpful and empathetic replies - much appreciated. I'll let you know how I get on.



What to do with iMac A1224 (2008/2009?) I can't log into (missing disk).

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