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El Capitan on an iMac MB324LL/A

I recently got an iMac MB324LL/a with 4 gigs of PC2-6400 DDR2 ram. The computer also came with a legal install of Mountain Lion which just flies on this machine. The App Store offers me a free install of El Capitan but I want to know if my hardware configuration is sufficient to run El Capitan as least as fast as Mountain Lion or even faster (there is more free El Capitan software on the App Store, Mountain Lion is somewhat limiting)? My iMac is my only piece of Apple hardware so syncing among other Apple devices is not a problem. Is it just better to think that "if it ain't bust, then don't fix it!!" Thanks, Ken.

iMac, OS X Mountain Lion (10.8.5), 2.66, 4gigs ram, 1 Terabyte

Posted on Feb 12, 2016 5:57 AM

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4 replies

Feb 12, 2016 8:11 AM in response to Ken Kline

One option is to create a new partition (~30- 50 GB), install the new OS, and ‘test drive’ it. If you like/don’t like it it, you can then remove the partition. Do a backup before you do anything. By doing this, if you don’t like it you won’t have to go though the revert process.


Check to make sure your applications are compatible.


Application Compatibility


Applications Compatibility (2)


El Capitan 10.11 Compatibility information

Open Disk Utility, select your hard drive (step 1), then the Partition tab (step 2), and select the partition. Using the /// at the bottom move it up (step 3) until the size box decrease by about 50 GB. Select the newly created space and hit the + button (step 4). Name it something and select Mac OS Extended (Journaled) as the format (step 5). Then hit the Apply button(step 6). Download the installer from the App Store and when it starts, point it at the new partition. You might want to make a copy of the installer outside the Applications folder to avoid having to re-download it in the future. Once installed, go to System Preferences/Startup Disk, select the new partition and reboot. Test away.


You might want to consider adding more RAM. The 2 places I’ve seen recommended most to buy reliable RAM are below. I have purchased RAM several times from Other World Computing and have always been very satisfied with the product and service. They have on-line instructions on how to replace the RAM. OWC has also tested RAM above what Apple states is the maximum. I now have 6GB installed on a early 2008 iMac supposedly limited to 4 GB and noticed an improvement.


Crucial

Feb 12, 2016 5:29 PM in response to Ken Kline

Be very careful about the RAM you get. Macs can be very picky about the RAM meeting the correct specs. The Crucial.com and MacSales.com (OWC) pointers Eric Root are well respected Mac RAM providers, which also provide very good service if something should go wrong with their RAM.


If you go with a local provider, make sure they will replace any questionable RAM.


You may also want to run Rember against any local RAM you get to see if it is at least starting out good

<http://www.kelleycomputing.net/rember/>

Set Loops: [X] Maximum

and run overnight

El Capitan on an iMac MB324LL/A

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