I have a mid 2010 Macbook Pro, How can I install Windows 7 without an Optical Drive?

For clarity: I have a mid 2010, Macbook Pro. I recently decided to upgrade to a Crucial SSD drive, double the ram (8 gigs), and remove the optical drive in favor of using my old drive as a back up. I am also currently running Yosemite.


I want to install Windows 7 onto my SSD, using bootcamp. Unfortunately I no longer have an optical drive installed, which makes things difficult as Bootcamp does not even give me the option to create a bootable USB.


Now, this is where things get kinda fuzzy:


MId 2010 macbooks use EFI, and are quite capable of booting from USB. How do I know? Because I booted from a USB drive in order to do a fresh install of Yosemite on my SSD.


I have read mutliple forums and threads with claims that folks have had no problems doing this on 2008 Macbook Pros running Snow Leopard. However, what seemed to be required was some clever .plist modding. I have used both text wrangler, and x-code to do this, unfortunately upon booting of bootcamp, bootcamp instantly crashes. Naturally, I can restore bootcamp because I made backups of the .plist file.


It would seem that modffying the .plist file assumes that the option to create a bootable USB device is grayed out. In my case, it is non existent.


I have also read that folks have had success using rEFIt, however rEFIt has been forked to rEFIned, and the developer of rEFIned made mention on his site that Yosemite handles booting differently than previous versions of OSX.


WIth that, I was hoping that some kind person could explain to me whats going on, what I am missing, and what I can do to make this happen just shy of tearing down my MBP and reisntalling the Optical Drive and dusting off my Win 7 disc.


Also, my Model Number/Bootrom is MBP 6,2.


Thanks in advance!

MacBook Pro (15-inch Mid 2010), OS X Yosemite (10.10)

Posted on Oct 27, 2014 7:19 AM

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22 replies

Oct 27, 2014 12:24 PM in response to Loner T

Thank you for your reply, and the information. This is what I came up with:


I added the strings as instructed, however when I went to sign the script in terminal, I was told:

/Applications/Utilities/Boot Camp Assistant.app: replacing existing signature

/Applications/Utilities/Boot Camp Assistant.app: code object is not signed at all

In subcomponent: /Applications/Utilities/Boot Camp Assistant.app/Contents/info.plist


Also, here are screen captures of the lines that I added. Mine are the top string entries:



User uploaded file


User uploaded file

Thank you for your help, thus far!

Oct 27, 2014 2:37 PM in response to Loner T

Completely by chance, too! I can't help but wonder if Yosemite (10.10) changed things that much. Most how to's were for Mavericks, it would seem. At the moment, my flash drive is formatting and being prepped for boot. So once I have results, I will create a new post detailing the steps that I went through with my combination of Hardware and OS.


I will post back here with whatever success or failure I run into!


Thanks!

Oct 28, 2014 9:12 AM in response to Loner T

Okay, so this is what I have so far: I figured out that one of my issues was that file vault was causing a hiccup, so I disabled that. I also decided to use another USB drive, a newer one. Everything seems to be working fine, right up until the restart. After the restart (and because I have Verbose Mode enabled by default), I am able to see that right where it tries to boot in EFI mode, it hangs. I tried using targeted disk mode, however the bootable drive simply does not show up at all.


I also tried manually selecting a boot order, by hitting "C" after the chime. The screen when gray for a bit, then came up with the error "No Bootable Device Found, press key when disk inserted", or something to that effect.

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I have a mid 2010 Macbook Pro, How can I install Windows 7 without an Optical Drive?

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