You can make a difference in the Apple Support Community!

When you sign up with your Apple Account, you can provide valuable feedback to other community members by upvoting helpful replies and User Tips.

Looks like no one’s replied in a while. To start the conversation again, simply ask a new question.

HowTo revert new MacBook Pro, Mac Pro or iMac to Snow Leopard

Hi all,


the following instructions were provided to me by our Apple Enterprise tech, and I've successfully performed these steps on a newly purchased MacBook Pro.


Please note the following - as of 15 Aug 2011:

- this technique will work on new MacBook Pro, Mac Pro or iMac computers UNTIL Apple modifies the hardware in these computers

- this technique will NEVER work on currently shipping MacBook Air or Mac Mini computers

- this configuration of Snow Leopard installed on a computer that shipped with Lion is not supported by Apple Support. It is entirely possible that after a trip for an AppleCare support incident, or the Apple Genius Bar, that the computer will return with Lion installed.


with these caveats, here are the step-by-step instructions:

---------------------------------------------------------------------


HowTo - NetRestore - Install Mac OS X 10.6.8 on new Mac delivered with Mac OS X 10.7.0


note: this only applies to Macbook Pro, Mac Pro, and iMac computers that originally shipped with Mac OS X 10.6.x.

Current Macbook Air and Mac Mini computers cannot be downgraded.


Required resources:

- another computer, running Mac OS X 10.6.8

- spare external disk

- Snow Leopard installation disc (Mac OS X 10.6.0 or 10.6.3 Box Set)

- Snow Leopard 10.6.8 Combo image file (download from Apple Support Downloads page)

- System Image Utility 10.6.8 (download Mac OS X 10.6.8 Update Combo v1.1.dmg from Apple Support Downloads page)



Procedure:


A. Create the NetImage:

1) mount the base source image (Mac OS X 10.6.3.dmg - created from Box Set Installer)

2) launch System Image Utility (from Server Admin Tools)

3) when source (from mounted image) appears in SIU screen, click Custom button

4) drag "Customize Package Selection" from Automator Library window to location

between existing "Define Image Source" and "Create Image"

5) drag "Add Packages and Post-Install Scripts" from Automator Library to location

between "Customize Package Selection" and "Create Image"

6) in the "Customize Package Selection" section:

a) expand the "Mac OS X" triangle

b) select options desired

c) collapse the "Mac OS X" triangle

7) mount the appropriate update image (Mac OS X 10.6.8 v1.1 Combo.dmg)

8) copy the MacOSXUpdCombo10.6.8.pkg package to a new local directory (Desktop/parts/)

9) drag the MacOSXUpdCombo10.6.8.pkg icon from local directory to the

"Add Packages and Post-Install Scripts" section of the SIU window

10) in the "Create Image" section:

a) select the type "NetRestore"

b) set the "Installed Volume:" field to "Macintosh HD" (no quotes, can be any name)

c) select the "Save To:" location

(will be faster to a second local internal disk)

(not faster to another partition on the same disk)

d) set the "Image Name:" field to "Snow Leopard 10.6.8 NetRestore"

e) the fields "Network Disk:", "Description:", and "Image Index:" don't

matter unless one is going to use results on a NetBoot Server

11) click the Run button

12) when the dialogs appear, ignore the text and click OK for proper completion

Dialog text: "Image creation in progress.

Cancel the image creation to proceed"


B. Post-process to create Restore Image:

1) find the directory created in the above process, named as in A.10d above

(Snow Leopard 10.6.8 NetRestore.nbi)

2) in this directory are three files:

- i386

- NBImageInfo.plist

- NetInstall.dmg

3) mount the NetInstall image (double-click the NetInstall.dmg file)

4) navigate into the Contents of the package, to: System/Installation/Packages/

5) copy the System.dmg file out to desktop or other work location

6) rename System.dmg to meaningful name, such as "Snow Leopard 10.6.8 System.dmg"

7) copy this .dmg file to external, bootable, Snow Leopard 10.6.8 system disk (install in /Users/Shared/)



C. Install Snow Leopard 10.6.8 on new MacBook Pro or Mac Pro


via command line:

1) boot MacBook Pro or Mac Pro from external source prepared in B.7

2) open Terminal

3) find the restore target device specification

a) run the command "diskutil list"

b) look for a 650 MB partition, labelled "Recovery HD" (likely disk0s3)

c) the target partition should be immediately prior to the "Recovery HD" partition

d) for a new computer with a 500 GB drive, this partition should be

labelled "Macintosh HD", with a size of 499.2 GB

e) make note of it's Device Identifier, likely disk0s2

4) issue the following asr (Apple Software Restore) command

sudo asr restore --source "/path/to/restore.dmg" --target /dev/disk0s2 --erase

(replace "/path/to/restore.dmg" with the path to the location and name used in step b.7)

5) this process proceeds and completes quickly, about 3-5 minutes. This is due to

the "--erase" parameter; it indicates a block-copy operation

If the process seems slow, likely the "--erase" option was omitted and

the copy is being done as a file-copy operation. Quit (ctl-c) and

examine the command used...



via DiskUtility GUI:


1) boot MacBook Pro or Mac Pro from external source prepared in B.7

2) launch /Applications/Utilities/DiskUtility.app

3) select the computer hard drive (typically "Macintosh HD")

4) click on the "Restore" tab

5) click on the "Image..." button to specify the "Source"

6) navigate to /Users/Shared/ and select the "Snow Leopard 10.6.8 System.dmg" file

7) drag the computer hard drive volume (Macintosh HD) to the "Destination" field

(note: grab the volume, not the disk!!)

8) enable the "Erase destination" checkbox

9) click the "Restore" button

10) in the ensuing "Are you sure?" dialog, click the "Erase" button

11) authenticate with the local admin credentials



Apple Tech recommends leaving the Restore partition alone, and installing in the "Macintosh HD" partition only


commands to know:

- asr

- diskutil (diskutil -list to see partitions)

- hdiutil

Posted on Aug 15, 2011 9:00 AM

Reply
364 replies

Feb 26, 2012 5:04 PM in response to Roy Miller

@ Tech Harmony -- totally agree. I haven't installed 2.7 yet. Not sure if new bugs will happen, new boot problems. So, that's ok... :)


@Roy -- I also saw that the 'operating system support' was Lion 10.7.3, however, the 'EFI 2.7 for Macbook Pro (early/late '11)' update appeared in the list via software update. hmm :\


I kinda like 'Mountain Lion'....maybe the developers will take out a couple Lion features people don't like. I'm hesistant to switch to Lion at all b/c the battery life for the 15" Macbook Pro (on 2 different Macbook Pros) was about ~50% of that in Snow Leopard. huh? ...

Mar 5, 2012 5:58 PM in response to Joe Weisman

Joe Weisman wrote:


I bought a new MacBook Pro with Lion on it and was not happy with Lion at all. I tried to 'revert' to Snow Leopard and had no success following this elaborate procedure. but then I just booted off a bootable hard drive made from my previous MacBook Pro, which was running Snow Leopard. That was a clone made with Carbon Copy Cloner.


It booted up just fine, and then I used Disk Utility to wipe the disk on the new Lion machine, and then I used Carbon Copy Cloner to copy my Snow Leopard clone onto the new machine, and then I shut everything down and disconnected the hard drive and my new machine now runs Snow Leopard without any problems, and without any Lions.



Was yours an early or late 2011 Mac Pro? After following this thread, I had come to the sad conclusion that running SnowL on a late 2011 machine was impossible?

Mar 6, 2012 6:55 PM in response to moonrabbit

hey, btw....I have the macbook pro 15" late/october 2011. Snow Leopard has been running w/ out any issues since Oct.. (I guessed that you meant macbook pro...instead of Mac Pro 🙂)

moonrabbit wrote:


Joe Weisman wrote:


I bought a new MacBook Pro with Lion on it and was not happy with Lion at all. I tried to 'revert' to Snow Leopard and had no success following this elaborate procedure. but then I just booted off a bootable hard drive made from my previous MacBook Pro, which was running Snow Leopard. That was a clone made with Carbon Copy Cloner.


It booted up just fine, and then I used Disk Utility to wipe the disk on the new Lion machine, and then I used Carbon Copy Cloner to copy my Snow Leopard clone onto the new machine, and then I shut everything down and disconnected the hard drive and my new machine now runs Snow Leopard without any problems, and without any Lions.



Was yours an early or late 2011 Mac Pro? After following this thread, I had come to the sad conclusion that running SnowL on a late 2011 machine was impossible?

Mar 6, 2012 8:24 PM in response to rpg2288

That's good to know. I got my Macbook Pro 15" late 2011 to boot up to an external hard drive that had Snow Leopard installed (via Carbon Copy). But I am wondering if I could partition the hard drive on my MBP and have both Lion and Snow Leopard. Don't have time to play with it now, but will later.

rpg2288 wrote:


hey, btw....I have the macbook pro 15" late/october 2011. Snow Leopard has been running w/ out any issues since Oct.. (I guessed that you meant macbook pro...instead of Mac Pro 🙂)

moonrabbit wrote:


Joe Weisman wrote:


I bought a new MacBook Pro with Lion on it and was not happy with Lion at all. I tried to 'revert' to Snow Leopard and had no success following this elaborate procedure. but then I just booted off a bootable hard drive made from my previous MacBook Pro, which was running Snow Leopard. That was a clone made with Carbon Copy Cloner.


It booted up just fine, and then I used Disk Utility to wipe the disk on the new Lion machine, and then I used Carbon Copy Cloner to copy my Snow Leopard clone onto the new machine, and then I shut everything down and disconnected the hard drive and my new machine now runs Snow Leopard without any problems, and without any Lions.



Was yours an early or late 2011 Mac Pro? After following this thread, I had come to the sad conclusion that running SnowL on a late 2011 machine was impossible?

Mar 11, 2012 5:40 AM in response to moonrabbit

I used the method in the first post and it worked perfectly on my 2011 MacBook Pro. I made one change:


Once you have the install dmg with 10.6.8 already integrated, in Lion, open Disk Utility and create a new partition for Snow Leopard. Mount the install dmg by double clicking on it. Select the newly created Snow Leopard partion and then click on restore. Select the mounted install image as source and the new Snow Leopard partition as destination. Click restore and wait for it to complete.


Restart the MacBook while holding down the option key and then select the Snow Leopard partition to boot from. The Apple welcome video will then play and you can then login in to your new Snow Leopard installation. Disk Utility can then be used to delete the Lion partition or you can use the Boot Disk tool found in System Preferences to set the priority of which OS to boot from if you want to dual boot.

Mar 25, 2012 10:57 AM in response to ratmz

Have never used that method so I am not sure. But one of the first thing you should do is use the Apple Recovery Disk Assistant program to create a Lion Recovery USB thumb drive that contains all the files and functionality of the Recovery HD partition. Just in case you have a drive failure and or can't access the built in Recovery HD.


You can go one step further and create a real Lion install USB thumb drive from the downloaded Lion InstallESD.DMG file. That way you would never need to download Lion again from the internet.


Good Luck.

Mar 25, 2012 11:27 AM in response to ratmz

@ratmz Nice, are you saying you were successful on the new 13"?


@Shootist007 has a good point about backing up the Lion Recovery partition but it's listed on that "Procedure" Google Site you linked... there's a link to the Apple page unless there's a new one up?


That Google site is just an old summary of Roy's original post with a few fixes he couldn't make to it (because you can't re-edit old posts). This whole thread is about cloning from a 10.6.8 system restore image that you make yourself. Although naturally people have piped in with many other methods including cloning from another computer runing 10.6.8

Mar 28, 2012 7:25 PM in response to Silly rabbit

What hoops do you mean?


Partitioning works with Disk Utility. How does bootcamp make it easier?


New machines will not boot from a retail SL disk, giving the three beeps (= memory problems, according to documentation) error, which will seriously confuse anyone who tried.


Some hoops are essential to get SL on new hardware. Roy's method permits us to make a bootable SL disc that will install on new hardware.

HowTo revert new MacBook Pro, Mac Pro or iMac to Snow Leopard

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.