El Capitan Ruined My Macbook Pro

As everyone else, i was excited to upgrade my Macbook's OS but after doing so, it appeared to be the worst mistake i have made in my life!

After installation, mac mac couldn't boot!

Apple logo with a stuck progress bar was all what is there!

I left it for hours but it never progressed!

I did clean installation 4 times with the same issue and while i am writing this, i am trying internet recovery again !!

my laptop is 2011 Macbook Pro with 750 GBs HDD and 8 GBs RAM!

NOw all what i wanna do is downgrade to Yosemite as this seems to me as a big faliure!

I did reset pram, reset Smc, reset nvram with no luck.

SAfe mode doesn't boot

Bootable USB doesn't open ( though it did only one time, after the installation MAC starts working then FileVault appear i tried to switch it off, it refused then the mac shut down and never booted again)


i can't open disk utility as it gives my white screen only!


i am on this since 2 days!


ANy advise?

MacBook Pro, OS X El Capitan (10.11)

Posted on Oct 5, 2015 4:02 AM

Reply
48 replies

Jun 10, 2017 10:04 AM in response to Muqbali

If I may put in my 2 centimes here... I'd like to address those who feel this forum is appropriate to cast aspersions because they have problems with their Mac hard\software... the individuals who answer your questions are here to help. May I suggest you keep anything other than respectful replies that are germane to the issue to yourself. I don't wish to read your rant, and I daresay nobody else does.

Oct 5, 2015 4:28 AM in response to Muqbali

On another working Mac, you can download El Capitan from App Store. Then create a USB installer, using Diskmaker X. Boot your Macbook, holding down the ALT-key on your keyboard. Now choose the USB stick as youre boot-devise. When the menu pops up, start Disk Utility, and format your harddrive in the macbook pro. Quit Disk Utility, and install El Capitan, on the newly formatted harddrive. Your Macbook should now work.


MAKE SURE TO BACKUP YOURE DATA BEFORE FORMATTING YOUR HARDDRIVE


Link to DiskMaker X : http://diskmakerx.com

Oct 5, 2015 10:02 AM in response to JimmyCMPIT

AFter restarting more than 10 times i could get to disk utility. I erased my hdd and now trying to install from bootable usb.

i Believe this issue is because of FileVault and that's why the progress bar is there, waiting for the dycription to be completed which takes long long time!

i will try to disable it this time and if same issue occured again, i'll have no other solution than to do all of this again and getting back to Yosemite!

but i don't have any mac nearby . Gonna try to find away to create bootable usb on windows!

Dec 30, 2015 12:23 PM in response to Autarx

Autarx wrote:


I'm seeking others in filing a class action lawsuit against Apple for their wrongdoing in this OS release. I feel there is enough evidence to support that they planned on rendering older laptops useless with the upgrade. Mine and many other computers won't even run when restored back to an older OS now.


This is nonsense. Older laptops, whether Macs or PCs, are eventually rendered obsolete by continued upgrades in operating systems, hardware, and security features. That's how it works. If you installed El Capitan on a computer that was too old to support it, that's your fault, not Apple's. They list, quite clearly, the computers that can take an upgrade, and the kinds of specifications on your system that need to be there. If you don't bother reading that information, again, that's your fault, not Apple's. 95% of the people who post questions/complaints here about something that has gone wrong since upgrading to El Capitan have their problems solved by removing out-of-date, bloated, third party crapware from their hard drives.

Jan 5, 2016 6:41 AM in response to pinkstones

At least the fanboys have arrived to the rescue of the mighty corporation.
The upgrade is not too old to support my computer, it is well within the boundaries of upgradable machines, not even towards the bottom-end as far as age goes. The computer won't run without random shut downs; even when 1 of several other hard drives with older operating systems on it is installed. I did not go head first and upgrade without having many backups. I maintain my machines. This is not a hard drive issue, it is not a battery or power supply issue (both of which are new) - I have had several techs look at it for an outside opinion other than my own, all of which agree that the OS altered the firmware of my GPU or logic board, which has now rendered it a paperweight.

Jan 5, 2016 7:18 AM in response to Autarx

not fanboys but I'm an IT professional with many years of both Windows and Mac support in corporations. If your "several techs" think the logic board did fail take it to an Apple Store for a diagnostic and they can tell you for sure, they can either estimate a cost or it may be under warranty depending on circumstances, or it could be another cause entirely. Otherwise your soapboxing is out of line to everyone who's taken time to provide you with free advice and expertise.

Jan 5, 2016 9:49 AM in response to Autarx

Autarx wrote:


At least the fanboys have arrived to the rescue of the mighty corporation.
The upgrade is not too old to support my computer, it is well within the boundaries of upgradable machines, not even towards the bottom-end as far as age goes. The computer won't run without random shut downs; even when 1 of several other hard drives with older operating systems on it is installed. I did not go head first and upgrade without having many backups. I maintain my machines. This is not a hard drive issue, it is not a battery or power supply issue (both of which are new) - I have had several techs look at it for an outside opinion other than my own, all of which agree that the OS altered the firmware of my GPU or logic board, which has now rendered it a paperweight.


I'm not a "fanboy." I'm not even a boy. I'm an Apple user just like everyone else here, no more, no less. I don't need to rescue Apple, for they don't even know I exist. As for why your computer suddenly became unusable, either there was something else going on before you upgraded to El Capitan and didn't know about it or you're one of the extreme minority of people who have downloaded it and experienced legitimate problems. Either way, there's nothing wrong with El Capitan. If El Capitan was faulty, if there was something truly wrong with it, lots more people would be experiencing problems, and they're not.


I also find it highly unlikely that El Capitan altered the firmware of your computer. That doesn't sound like something an operating system, no matter from which company, is even capable of doing.

Feb 5, 2016 10:27 AM in response to JimmyCMPIT

since your an "IT professional" you should be fully aware that OS upgrades/alterations can at times make systems inoperable. I brought the computer to the Geniuses at Apple and they're stumped, they recommend to send it in for a wieldy repair charge. In response to the free advice I've gleaned here, who needs enemies with support like you.

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El Capitan Ruined My Macbook Pro

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