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Windows 8.1 install fails on new 2013 Retina MacBook

I doubt there are many people out there who can help with this yet. I was able to pick up my 2013 Haswell Retina MacBook Pro from my local Apple store this morning (yay!), and so far everything has been stellar. However, I'm unable to install Windows 8.1 via Bootcamp. I have not tried Windows 8 or 7.


I've tried installing both via USB thumb drive, and via DVD on external SuperDrive, with the same results. I know that 2013 MacBook Airs have to install via UEFI so I've tried that as well. What I've tried:


Booting into UEFI:

- After creating the partition in Bootcamp, I boot holding OPTION

- At the boot selection screen I select "EFI BOOT"

- I go through all the motions, including formatting the BOOTCAMP partition

- After all the files have been copied, I get a message that "Windows cannot update the boot partition and that my progress won't be saved" (not the exact message).


Booting via BIOS:

- After creating the partition in Bootcamp, I boot holding OPTION

- At the boot selection screen I pick "WINDOWS"

- When I get to the partition selection/formatting screen it won't let me proceed, when I expand the error message it tells me that partition can't be used because it has a GPT partition table.


So, I'm stuck =( Any ideas?

MacBook Pro with Retina display, OS X Mavericks (10.9)

Posted on Oct 23, 2013 8:56 PM

Reply
602 replies

Dec 8, 2013 11:50 AM in response to jdhiro

So after days of trying many things suggested on this tread. I finally got my Windows 8.1 install to work. I can't confirm that this will work for other people but this worked for me.


My current theory as to why so many people are having problems is because when Windows is installing itself it needs a bit more UN-PARTITIONED space on the hard drive than what Boot Camp gives it. So my whole premise during this install was to allow some un-partitioned space to remain on the drive.


I have a late 2013 Macbook Pro 15" model. Because I had tried so many things w/o them working I decided to start fresh.


1. Started my Mac with CMD R held. This booted the Internet Recovery mode.


2. Using the Disk Utility I erased the disk, by creating a single partition that occupied the whole hard drive.


3. Then I reduced the MAC partition to the size I wanted it to be leaving empty space on the drive for my windows partition.


4. Installed Mac OS 10.9


5. Applied all updates available to Mac OS


6. Using Boot Camp assistant I selected only the options to DOWNLOAD the latest Boot Camp Drivers and CREATE a WINDOWS install USB Disk from my windows 8.1 iso file.


7. What I did NOT do is allow BootCamp Assistant to create my Windows partition.


8. I wanted to install windows clean and then manually install the Apple Drivers, so I went into the Windows Install USB drive that I had just created and moved some files into a folder that I called OFFLINE.

- - I Moved a folder called $WinPEDriver$; a folder called BootCamp, a file called AutoUnattended.xml, and a file called bootmgr


9. I then restarted my computer and held the option key


10. I then selected the EFI Boot option, this booted me into windows setup


11. When you get to moment of selecting where to install windows. I clicked on NEW and created a partition that was 500 Megabytes SMALLER than the available hard drive space.


12. I then preceded to install windows into that partition.


13. The windows install went on w/o any problems. Once I was in windows 8.1 I copied the OFFLINE folder I had moved stuff into on the USB drive onto my Windows Desktop and then ran SETUP.exe that is inside the bootcamp folder.


I finally now have a new Mac Book Pro with Windows 8.1 installed and working in EFI boot mode.


In my opinion what made the difference was:

1) not allowing boot camp to create my windows partition.

2) when I created the partition with the windows installer I purposely made the partition a bit smaller therefore allowing some space on the drive to remain free.


Knowing these two caveats. It would be interesting to see if others have luck installing windows 8.1 w/o having to do a complete clean install like I did.

Dec 8, 2013 7:53 PM in response to JC Bond

JC Bond could you do me a favour please?

In Windows could you go to device manager and open up the display adapters and double click on the Nvidia adapter then have a look which driver is being used on your system (the number will do)?

I'm assuming you downloaded the support drivers through Boot Camp and that you got the newer ones (5411 iirc).

Many thanks.

Dec 9, 2013 12:52 AM in response to Number88

Nvidia is notorious for using diferent version numbers for each portion of their driver. If I go under the properties of the NVidia driver in the Device Manager (as you sugested) the version number listed is 9.18.13.2716.


If I go to the NVidia Control panel and select system information the Driver Version listed is 327.16

Dec 9, 2013 1:00 AM in response to JC Bond

Thanks JC Bond, that's a version I haven't seen before. I thought it might be 😁

Those numbers are the same (almost). If you ignore the first 4 digits in the device manager display you are left with 3.2716 which as you can see is the same number portrayed differently. That seems to be how they do it.

I previously had Nvidia driver 327.23 (think it was) but in Windows it became x.xx.x3.2723


One other point if you will 🙂 did you download the Boot Camp drivers through Boot Camp Assistant and did you get version 5411 (or maybe 5421, can't remember)?

It appears that these drivers are only available in this way - ie not available on the Apple Support page for BC downloads.


Many thanks!

Dec 9, 2013 9:33 AM in response to dstroot

that partition is what Windows was trying to create and was not being able to. Do not delete it or you will loose the ability to boot one OS or the other.


There are several hidden partitions that each OS needs.


For instance the 620 MB partition is the MAC OS Recovery partition. There is also a 200MB partition that OSX uses when it needs to do updates to the computer Firmware. Then there is a Windows EFI partition that is needed to boot the Windows OS.


All these small partitions are needed by one or the other OS. The issue why installling windows 8.1 EFI via BootCamp was failing is because BootCamp was taking the whole hardrive and not allowing space for windows to create these small hidden partitions that are needed.

Windows 8.1 install fails on new 2013 Retina MacBook

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