Boot Camp partition moved to external:"No bootable device found"

I have just installed a new SSD, moved my old OSX partition to the new drive and am currently using the old hdd in an enclosure as an external hard drive.
I can access all my files on my old OSX partition and my bootcamp partition when connected to my laptop. However, when i try to boot from my old bootcamp partition i get the "No bootable device found -- insert boot disk and press any key" message. That is when i boot from Startup Disk and target the bootcamp partion.
When restarting my computer with the external harddrive connected and pressing the option key i only get "SSD" and "Recovery" as options, it does not recognize the external harddrive as a startup option at all.
Is there anything i can do to use my old boot camp partition again? It worked perfectly fine before being external to the computer.
My computer is a 2011 mbp with Mavericks, my boot camp patition is installed with windows 7.

Microsoft requires that the partition for Windows be on an internal disk. It will not see an external drive as bootable.
Allan

Similar Messages

  • Theres a Boot Camp partition, but it's not bootable

    Hi, so I made a boot camp partition and then my computer restarted, and opened the windows installer. Me being stupid, I realised that I had forgot to put some drivers onto my USB. So, I went back to OSX (by quitting out of the installer and pressing OPTION while booting up) to get those pesky files.
    Then I went into System Preferences to boot of Boot Camp, and Lo Behold! No bootable Bootcamp. It only shows my original hard drive and my Windows CD.
    I am using OSX Mavericks and a early 2010 MBP.
    Proof of my partition:
    Proof of no bootable partition:
    Note: Same thing happens when I restart my computer while holding OPTION, not bootcamp.

    first one setup the partition for bootcamp then one install windows on the partition
    did you install windows from dvd or usb stick ?
    if not then you will not be able to boot from the bootcamp partition as it would not have an operating system installed on it

  • Boot Camp not installing Windows 7 - "No bootable device, insert boot disk and press any key."

    I need some help with something. A while back, I put a brand new hard drive in my MacBook, a 500 GB model to replace the 120 GB one. I cloned everything successfully to the new drive via Carbon Copy Cloner, but now I want to make a Boot Camp partition on the drive. The SuperDrive in it is defective, so I use an external FireWire drive. So far the Boot Camp Assistant in 10.7 Lion works fine in creating the partition, but when it gets to the part where it tries to boot into the Windows installation disk (32-bit Windows 7 Home Premium, or could the 64-bit work fine as well?), it shows a black scree nwith "No bootable device, insert boot disk and press any key." I try pressing keys, but nothing happens.
    I also tried using rEFIt, but that didn't work out either.
    Here are the specifications of my machine...
    MacBook (Early 2009 model)
    2.0 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo processor
    4 GB of RAM
    500 GB SATA hard drive
    Dual-layer SuperDrive (defective, may replace it once I have the cash)
    NVIDIA GeForce 9400M graphics chip
    Mac OS X 10.7.2 Lion
    Can anyone help me out with this? Is there some sort of workaround?

    Wiley207 wrote:
    Believe it or not, it was the FireWire drive that was the problem! I managed to successfully install Windows 7 using an external USB DVD drive!
    Well I am truly staggered, I have tried this on two different MacBook Pros, with three different external USB optical drives. Don't know if you googled as I suggested but you would find hundreds of others who have found same thing. The exception is MacBook Air which works with the Apple writer, but I don't know much about this.
    Were you doing any of the special workarounds with refedit etc?
    What model USB DVD drive?

  • Paragon NTFS 11 not recognising Boot Camp partition or NTFS external hard drives!

    Hi guys,
    So i had Paragon NTFS activated and working fine back when i was on Lion. Aftering upgrading to OS X mavericks, it was still working fine and recognising my boot camp drive, and any other NTFS capable ex.hard drive. My Paragon NTFS version back then was 10.1.xx
    When paragon released their official v11.1.263, which supported OS X Mavericks officialy, i thought i would upgrade and benefit from that support. Ever since i upgrade, paragon is installed, activated, but not showing any NTFS drives in the menu. All my NTFS drives are therefore read only, and i cant transfer anything.
    Any idea how to solve this issue? Thanks

    Interesting. Comes with? you didn't have either before? Paragon is commercial and is now v. 10.0, they were the only one keeping updated and was supporting 10.7.4. I would not enable more than one.
    For writing to HFS Paragon has theirs but probably give the nod to MacDrive there.
    I never do an upgrade to a new OS over the old system, I backup (clone) and format the drive with the new OS and do the install so whatever is there I know is clean and also to keep from carrying around leftovers from years and systems past.
    I would assme Paragon is limited. Try their site and knowledge base?
    MacDrive
    http://www.mediafour.com/updates/macdrive
    Paragon HFS
    http://www.paragon-software.com/home/hfs-windows/
    Paragon NTFS
    http://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/26288/ntfs-for-mac-os-x
    http://www.paragon-software.com/home/ntfs-mac/

  • Daily Backup for Boot Camp partition

    I'm looking for a Windows software to perform daily incremental backups from my Boot Camp partition to an external USB drive. It should also be possible to restore the COMPLETE Boot Camp partition from that backup in case of a hard drive failure. (It's NOT necessary that various versions of files are kept around-the-clock like Time Machine does. It's also not necessary that the backup itself is bootable.)
    I've tried Genie TimelIne, but unfortunately it wasn't able to manage a complete restore. The taskbar was missing, no applications were installed (only present), settings were missing after the restore..., so I had to manually install nearly everything.
    I've heard "Macrium Reflect" should be better. Is this true or does anyone have another good tip?
    BTW I'm not looking for a solution to backup from the Boot Camp partition to the OS X partition and I don't want to create a complete clone every day.
    Thanks for your help!

    coxorange wrote:
    A bit difficult to test such a software including worst case recovery if you can't dispense with the concerned computer temporarily. And VERY time-consuming!! Hence I asked for personal experiences.
    Well,  Anyone elses personal experience won't mean much to you unless they have the same setup as you, so asking others for personal experience is as much of a crap shoot for you as doing it yourself.  I went through lots of testing several years ago on my first MacBook Pro, but almost none of that testing is valid for my current machine.  With the variations in machines, and machine configurations, what works for someone else might not work for you, and what might work for you might not work for someone else.  I learned this when I was testing Colnexzilla as a possible backup/cloning tool.  It worked fine on my MacBook Pro, but wouldn't work properly for a number of other users.
    coxorange wrote:
    What do you mean I'm confusing?
    I always wrote about the Boot Camp partition.
    I agree that what you are asking for seems rather confusing.  You talk about backing up your data on your Windows partition, and you talk about performing incremental backups.  The WIndows 7 Data backup utility it perfect for tasks like that.  It's when you start wanting to perform disk image backups, and then ontop of that perform incremental image backups of your Windows partition that things get challenging and confusing.  Since you aren't clear about what scheme you want to use, it is hard to answer with a "clear answer" and not get confused by what you seem to be asking.
    coxorange wrote:
    As far as I know that's not enough to perform incremental backups including EVERYTHING on the Boot Camp partition.
    If you use the Windows 7 data backup and perform incremental backups, you will have a backiup of all your data from the Windows partition.  Isn't that want you want?  If you want to perform a restore, it will not restore you back to a bootable drive, but it will have all your data and files backed up.  If you want to perform a partition backup image, and make those backups incremental nightly, it might be possible.  Since you are talking about a Boot Camp partition on a Mac here, you also need to clarify if you want this backup to run when teh system is booted into Windows, or when teh system is runnign MacOS, or ifit is acceptable to boot from yet another media for the backup purposes. 
    At this time, I'm not sure that any software exists which can make backup image of your Boot Camp/Windows partition when runnign MacOS that will make a backup image that cna restore to a bootable volume and can do incremental backups.  There are few, if any backup tools that will run runder native Windows on your Boot Camp partition that will make an image file backup that can do incremental backups, and also allow you to restore to a bootable partition.  I beleive that the Paragon software is one of the very few that can do this.  I have tried and successfully made backupns and restores from backup disk images using custom boot drives for CloneZilla, and the Paragon Drive Backup tool.  I don't believe that CloneZilla will do inremental backups, and I'm not sure about the Paragon software as I stopped using Boot Camp about 1.5 years ago when I upgraded to my current MacBook Pro.  Now with this system, I don't run native Windows, I only run it virtualized using Parallels Desktop and VMWare Fusion.  For both of those, I get a full system backup with each MacOS backup I take, since the Windows File System is virtualized and stored entirely in files on my MacOS partition.

  • Windows will not boot to my boot camp partition on a DIY fusion drive - gives "No bootable device found" error

    I have a MacBookPro 9,1 (mid-2012, non-retina) running OS X 10.8.2.  Here is what I have done to my system:
    Installed Windows 7 x64 Pro to a boot camp partition; installed all windows updates.
    Using WinClone, save an image of this boot camp partition.
    Removed optical drive and HDD.
    Installed HDD in place of optical drive.
    Installed SSD in place of HDD.
    Booted to recovery partition, installed OS X on a flash drive.
    Booted to flash drive, created fusion drive using [MacWorld's instructions](http://www.macworld.com/article/2014011/how-to-make-your-own-fusion-drive.html)
    Booted to recovery partition on flash drive.
    Restored system to fusion drive from a Time Machine backup. Unfortunately, it seems that because I never installed OS X on my fusion drive, I do not have a recovery partition. But that's an issue for another day.
    Using Boot Camp assistant, created a boot camp partition on my HDD.
    Using WinClone, restore my Windows installation from the previously created image.
    Now, Windows boots to a black screen telling me that it can't find a bootable device. I have tried a few things to resolve this, all without effect:
    I know that VMware Fusion has to prepare a boot camp partition in order to virtualize it, so I figured it might inadvertently fix things. Alas, while it *did* successfully boot my boot camp partition into a virtual machine, I still can't boot into Windows.
    I figured I'd just try to reinstall Windows. Surprisingly, my system booted to my Windows install disc, which was in my original optical drive (which I had put in a USB case). But, Windows refused to install, giving me a an error 0x8030024. It seems the solution to this issue is to disconnect all drives but the one on which you want to install Windows, which is something I would dearly like to avoid. It would be a pain, but more than that, I'm afraid it would bork my fusion drive, even if I'm careful to never boot to OS X with the SSD disconnected.
    A lot of places said that this error results from a borked MBR, and suggest using a tool like gptfdisk to rewrite it. I followed the instructions [here](https://discussions.apple.com/thread/4144252?start=0&tstart=0), but *that* didn't work either.
    I am now completely at a loss as to how to proceed, and Google isn't much help either.
    In conclusion, here is some information that you may find helpful:
        $ diskutil list
    /dev/disk0
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *240.1 GB   disk0
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk0s1
       2:          Apple_CoreStorage                         239.7 GB   disk0s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Boot OS X               134.2 MB   disk0s3
    /dev/disk1
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *750.2 GB   disk1
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk1s1
       2:          Apple_CoreStorage                         648.4 GB   disk1s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Boot OS X               650.0 MB   disk1s3
       4:       Microsoft Basic Data BOOTCAMP                100.9 GB   disk1s4
    /dev/disk2
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:                  Apple_HFS Mayfly                 *884.0 GB   disk2
    $ diskutil cs list
    CoreStorage logical volume groups (1 found)
    |
    +-- Logical Volume Group 63DC419F-1A09-4C5B-977A-F59F79502CA1
       =========================================================
       Name:         FusionDrive
       Size:         888087773184 B (888.1 GB)
       Free Space:   0 B (0 B)
       |
       +-< Physical Volume B1B14251-2DB3-491C-9E7A-5C2FD11881BA
       |   ----------------------------------------------------
       |   Index:    0
       |   Disk:     disk0s2
       |   Status:   Online
       |   Size:     239713435648 B (239.7 GB)
       |
       +-< Physical Volume D0BA2837-514D-4620-8E1D-26D18137CA94
       |   ----------------------------------------------------
       |   Index:    1
       |   Disk:     disk1s2
       |   Status:   Online
       |   Size:     648374337536 B (648.4 GB)
       |
       +-> Logical Volume Family 736A8900-FE9C-4342-A932-EDC35444774C
           Encryption Status:       Unlocked
           Encryption Type:         None
           Conversion Status:       NoConversion
           Conversion Direction:    -none-
           Has Encrypted Extents:   No
           Fully Secure:            No
           Passphrase Required:     No
           |
           +-> Logical Volume B4997853-59F8-4480-BB48-3481B2F2A123
               Disk:               disk2
               Status:             Online
               Size (Total):       884000030720 B (884.0 GB)
               Size (Converted):   -none-
               Revertible:         No
               LV Name:            Mayfly
               Volume Name:        Mayfly
               Content Hint:       Apple_HFS
    $  sudo gpt -r -vv show disk1
    Password:
    gpt show: disk1: mediasize=750156374016; sectorsize=512; blocks=1465149168
    gpt show: disk1: Suspicious MBR at sector 0
    gpt show: disk1: Pri GPT at sector 1
    gpt show: disk1: Sec GPT at sector 1465149167
          start        size  index  contents
              0           1         MBR
              1           1         Pri GPT header
              2          32         Pri GPT table
             34           6        
             40      409600      1  GPT part - C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B
         409640  1266356128      2  GPT part - 53746F72-6167-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
    1266765768     1269536      3  GPT part - 426F6F74-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
    1268035304         280        
    1268035584   197111808      4  GPT part - EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7
    1465147392        1743        
    1465149135          32         Sec GPT table
    1465149167           1         Sec GPT header
    $ sudo fdisk /dev/disk1
    Disk: /dev/disk1     geometry: 91201/255/63 [1465149168 sectors]
    Signature: 0xAA55
             Starting       Ending
    #: id  cyl  hd sec -  cyl  hd sec [     start -       size]
    1: EE    0   0   2 - 1023 254  63 [         1 - 1268035583]     *2: 07 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [1268035584 -  197111808] HPFS/QNX/AUX
    3: 00    0   0   0 -    0   0   0 [         0 -          0] unused     
    4: 00    0   0   0 -    0   0   0 [         0 -          0] unused

    My setup is very similar to your's, Ryan, on a Mac Mini5,2 and the ordering is different and Winclone was not used.
    1. New Mini with internal 500GB with Mountain Lion(ML), put into an external FW enclosure, so the Mini can/could be booted using an external drive for contigency.
    2. Replaced internal stock HDD (500Gb/5400rpm) with SSD/HDD (256Gb SSD/1TB 5400rpm).
    3. Installed W7 x64 on 64GB partition on HDD, which was a single-partition drive to begin with.
    4. The remaining HDD partition and the entire SSD was put into a Fusion drive.
    5. Using Command-R, new ML installed on Fusion HD.
    Here is what I currently have...(Disk0 - SSD, Disk1- 1TB HDD, Disk2 - Fusion, Disk3 - External FW).
    diskutil list
    /dev/disk0
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *256.1 GB   disk0
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk0s1
       2:          Apple_CoreStorage                         255.7 GB   disk0s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Boot OS X               134.2 MB   disk0s3
    /dev/disk1
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *1.0 TB     disk1
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk1s1
       2:          Apple_CoreStorage                         934.5 GB   disk1s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Boot OS X               650.0 MB   disk1s3
       4:       Microsoft Basic Data BOOTCAMP                64.9 GB    disk1s4
    /dev/disk2
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:                  Apple_HFS Fusion HD              *1.2 TB     disk2
    /dev/disk3
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *500.1 GB   disk3
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk3s1
       2:                  Apple_HFS Rescue HD               371.8 GB   disk3s2
       3:                  Apple_HFS Leopard HD              31.9 GB    disk3s3
       4:                  Apple_HFS Snow Leopard HD         31.9 GB    disk3s4
       5:                  Apple_HFS Lion HD                 31.3 GB    disk3s5
       6:                 Apple_Boot Lion Recovery HD        650.0 MB   disk3s6
       7:                  Apple_HFS Mountain Lion HD        31.3 GB    disk3s7
       8:                 Apple_Boot Mountain Lion Recove... 650.0 MB   disk3s8
    diskutil cs list
    CoreStorage logical volume groups (1 found)
    |
    +-- Logical Volume Group A8C00490-0E14-401F-AB69-59F37724E8C4
        =========================================================
        Name:         Fusion
        Size:         1190201270272 B (1.2 TB)
        Free Space:   0 B (0 B)
        |
        +-< Physical Volume 4772013B-5520-4801-9BE5-BCAEF4AEDAB3
        |   ----------------------------------------------------
        |   Index:    0
        |   Disk:     disk0s2
        |   Status:   Online
        |   Size:     255716540416 B (255.7 GB)
        |
        +-< Physical Volume A679A101-3C78-4A59-B5EE-A4339210CFAD
        |   ----------------------------------------------------
        |   Index:    1
        |   Disk:     disk1s2
        |   Status:   Online
        |   Size:     934484729856 B (934.5 GB)
        |
        +-> Logical Volume Family 5EF5C7CA-0B9C-4169-82A1-41C84F206672
            Encryption Status:       Unlocked
            Encryption Type:         None
            Conversion Status:       NoConversion
            Conversion Direction:    -none-
            Has Encrypted Extents:   No
            Fully Secure:            No
            Passphrase Required:     No
            |
            +-> Logical Volume 1512657C-ED13-4B31-82C6-7AECBBCA7F98
                Disk:               disk2
                Status:             Online
                Size (Total):       1185508581376 B (1.2 TB)
                Size (Converted):   -none-
                Revertible:         No
                LV Name:            Fusion HD
                Volume Name:        Fusion HD
                Content Hint:       Apple_HFS
    sudo gpt -r -vv show disk1
    gpt show: disk1: mediasize=1000204886016; sectorsize=512; blocks=1953525168
    gpt show: disk1: Suspicious MBR at sector 0
    gpt show: disk1: Pri GPT at sector 1
    gpt show: disk1: Sec GPT at sector 1953525167
           start        size  index  contents
               0           1         MBR
               1           1         Pri GPT header
               2          32         Pri GPT table
              34           6        
              40      409600      1  GPT part - C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B
          409640  1825165488      2  GPT part - 53746F72-6167-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
      1825575128     1269544      3  GPT part - 426F6F74-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
      1826844672   126679040      4  GPT part - EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7
      1953523712        1423        
      1953525135          32         Sec GPT table
      1953525167           1         Sec GPT header

  • How do I back up my Boot Camp partition to external firewire drive?

    I have a 15 GB Windows XP Boot Camp partition (FAT32). I want to back it up to a 120 GB external Firewire drive. (I know the backup won't be bootable). In OX X Disk Utility, I formatted the external drive as MS-DOS (FAT). I planned to do the backup using the Windows Backup utility.
    However, when booted into WinXP, Windows will not recognize the external hard drive. I thought I might need to create a FAT32 partion of 32 GB or less on the external drive, but I apparently can't do this in OS X or Windows (since Windows doesn't recognize the drive).
    Any suggestions on how to backup the Boot Camp partition will be appreciated. I'm mainly interested in preserving all programs and data. Ideally, a clone could be created that could be restored back to the original partition in bootable form, but from studying this and other forums, it dosn't seem to be easy to do this for a FAT32-formatted volume.

    My goal was to create a bootable clone of my FAT32 Boot Camp partition, while at the same time increasing the size of the partition from 15 GB to 32 GB if possible. This is what I did:
    1. As suggested in this thread, I used Disk Utility to create a disk image. I formatted it as MS-DOS (FAT), and made it 32 GB in size.
    2. Used the Finder to copy all files from my 15 GB Windows XP partition to the new disk image.
    The following steps were only to determine if the disk image is a viable backup:
    3. Removed the internal hard drive with my original Win XP partition, and installed a new internal hard drive.
    4. Used Boot Camp Assistant to create a 32 GB Boot Camp partition on the new internal drive.
    5. Inserted my Win XP installation disk and started the Windows installation. Formatted the new partition as FAT32. (I used the long rather than the quick format method--not sure if this was necessary.)
    6. Continued the Windows installation to the point of restarting the computer, at which time I used the Option key to boot back into OS X.
    7. Used the Finder to copy all the files from the 32 GB disk image to the new Boot Camp partition. (This overwrote a few Windows files installed by the aborted Win XP installation.)
    8. Restarted and used the Option key to select the new 32 GB Boot Camp Partition. Windows booted as usual with all files, programs, etc. from the original 15 GB partition. Windows did complain about "new hardware" and required a restart, but all appears normal.
    This indicates that the disk image containing all the files from my original Boot Camp partition is a viable backup, and can be used to restore the partition if necessary. I'm not sure if formatting the disk image as MS-DOS (rather than Mac OS extended) was necessary, or not.

  • How do I write to my boot camp partition with Paragon NTFS that comes with Mountain Lion?  Or how do I get my boot camp partition to show up in Paragon's "Available NTFS partitions:" panel like my external hard drive does?

    I've just set up boot camp on my MacBookPro with a freshly installed Mountain Lion and Windows 7. 
    I would like to read and write in both directions from drive to drive if possible.  I've hunted around quite a bit to try and work this out, and so far I understand that one can write to or transfer files from one drive to the other with Paragon NTFS among other softwares. 
    I noticed when I looked in my system preferences the utility "Paragon NTFS for Mac OS X" came with Mountain Lion and it will recognize an external hard drive when I have one plugged in under "Available NTFS partitions:".  However, it does not automatically recognize my NTFS boot camp partition nor does it automatically give me write access. 
    Is the Paragon NTFS that comes with Mountain Lion limited in some way? 
    Do I still need to purchase and download the software of the same name from Paragon to get the full write privilidges I want or is there something I can do to get the version of Paragon on my MAC to recognize and give me write priviledges to my boot camp partition?
    I'm open to all suggestions to get the read / write access between partitions in my boot camped drive.
    MacFUSE is also listed in the System Preferences of my machine (it also came with Mountain Lion), if that helps.  I'm still working out exactly what each of these is supposed to do and how I can use it to accomplish the task at hand.
    My boot camp drive does appear normally in other contexts and in disk utility it indicates that the drive is mounted.
    Thank you for any guidance you can give me. 

    Interesting. Comes with? you didn't have either before? Paragon is commercial and is now v. 10.0, they were the only one keeping updated and was supporting 10.7.4. I would not enable more than one.
    For writing to HFS Paragon has theirs but probably give the nod to MacDrive there.
    I never do an upgrade to a new OS over the old system, I backup (clone) and format the drive with the new OS and do the install so whatever is there I know is clean and also to keep from carrying around leftovers from years and systems past.
    I would assme Paragon is limited. Try their site and knowledge base?
    MacDrive
    http://www.mediafour.com/updates/macdrive
    Paragon HFS
    http://www.paragon-software.com/home/hfs-windows/
    Paragon NTFS
    http://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/26288/ntfs-for-mac-os-x
    http://www.paragon-software.com/home/ntfs-mac/

  • Boot Camp partition not bootable after update

    Hi All, hi Loner T!
    After an OSX update I lost my Boot Camp partition. Reading you replies here on the forum, i was able to save my important files through testdisk, for what i'm really thankful! Following your instructions in this thread (Bootcamp disk0s4 gone after Yosemite update) the bootcamp partition finally appeared in finder and disk utility.
    But sudo gdisk /dev/disk0 returns with this:
    Kovacs-Peter-Attilas-MacBook-Pro:~ kovacspeterattila$ Sudo gdisk /dev/disk0
    Password:
    GPT fdisk (gdisk) version 1.0.0
    Warning: Devices opened with shared lock will not have their
    partition table automatically reloaded!
    Partition table scan:
      MBR: protective
      BSD: not present
      APM: not present
      GPT: present
    Found valid GPT with protective MBR; using GPT.
    Command (? for help):
    So if it is able i would avoid reinstalling windows, and all the applications with your help. I saw many people asking you about this case, so i hope you may can help me as well.
    Thank you!

    Hi LonerT, I too have lost the ability to boot into windows/bootcamp - only Mac & recovery are displayed at startup.
    Below are my results for the same set of instructions.
    What does it indicate?
    Thank you!
    Hils-MacBook-Pro-2:~ king_hil$ diskutil list
    /dev/disk0
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *251.0 GB   disk0
       1:                        EFI EFI                     209.7 MB   disk0s1
       2:                  Apple_HFS Macintosh HD            175.0 GB   disk0s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Recovery HD             650.0 MB   disk0s3
       4:       Microsoft Basic Data                         50.0 GB    disk0s4
    Hils-MacBook-Pro-2:~ king_hil$ diskutil cs list
    No CoreStorage logical volume groups found
    Hils-MacBook-Pro-2:~ king_hil$ sudo gpt -vv -r show /dev/disk0
    gpt show: /dev/disk0: mediasize=251000193024; sectorsize=512; blocks=490234752
    gpt show: /dev/disk0: Suspicious MBR at sector 0
    gpt show: /dev/disk0: Pri GPT at sector 1
    gpt show: /dev/disk0: Sec GPT at sector 490234751
          start       size  index  contents
              0          1         MBR
              1          1         Pri GPT header
              2         32         Pri GPT table
             34          6        
             40     409600      1  GPT part - C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B
         409640  341796872      2  GPT part - 48465300-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
      342206512    1269536      3  GPT part - 426F6F74-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
      343476048   49103024        
      392579072   97654784      4  GPT part - EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7
      490233856        863        
      490234719         32         Sec GPT table
      490234751          1         Sec GPT header
    Hils-MacBook-Pro-2:~ king_hil$ sudo fdisk /dev/disk0
    Disk: /dev/disk0 geometry: 30515/255/63 [490234752 sectors]
    Signature: 0xAA55
             Starting       Ending
    #: id  cyl  hd sec -  cyl  hd sec [     start -       size]
    1: EE 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [         1 -     409639] <Unknown ID>
    2: AF 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [    409640 -  341796872] HFS+       
    3: AB 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [ 342206512 -    1269536] Darwin Boot
    4: 0C 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [ 392579072 -   97654784] Win95 FAT32L
    I added:
    Hils-MacBook-Pro-2:~ king_hil$ sudo fdisk /dev/disk0
    Disk: /dev/disk0 geometry: 30515/255/63 [490234752 sectors]
    Signature: 0xAA55
             Starting       Ending
    #: id  cyl  hd sec -  cyl  hd sec [     start -       size]
    1: EE 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [         1 -     409639] <Unknown ID>
    2: AF 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [    409640 -  341796872] HFS+       
    3: AB 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [ 342206512 -    1269536] Darwin Boot
    4: 0C 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [ 392579072 -   97654784] Win95 FAT32L
    Hils-MacBook-Pro-2:~ king_hil$ sudo dd if=/dev/rdisk0s4 count=1 2>/dev/null | hexdump -C
    00000000  be b7 90 5b dc 2d 75 3f  bc f2 56 7b d7 ee 87 19  |...[.-u?..V{....|
    00000010  b9 cd de 96 1f af c7 a9  ef 83 eb 21 fa 90 7e a2  |...........!..~.|
    00000020  31 1a 9c e9 c3 ea c9 78  78 3f 02 1f 31 0f 54 90  |1......xx?..1.T.|
    00000030  26 4d d9 a3 e1 a9 7f f4  f7 0f 65 e6 1e 6b fb c1  |&M........e..k..|
    00000040  a6 13 bf 5e 52 89 ef 07  a5 d8 4b 32 86 93 94 09  |...^R.....K2....|
    00000050  db 49 d6 84 6f 7f 51 54  fc a4 70 22 7b a2 78 a2  |.I..o.QT..p"{.x.|
    00000060  76 52 b3 1f 62 68 62 72  d2 b6 17 7e be 8b d7 ff  |vR..bhbr...~....|
    00000070  c5 df 3b 5a f8 4b 71 2f  38 c3 4e 36 6f e6 cb f7  |..;Z.Kq/8.N6o...|
    00000080  15 f2 8a 7f a5 bd e5 bd  a3 aa 79 b5 bc 3a 5e 03  |..........y..:^.|
    00000090  af f1 d7 c2 db 3e 1d 4e  df a9 ef 14 d7 94 e0 74  |.....>.N.......t|
    000000a0  3d 85 62 4a 71 4a 7b ca  70 ca 6c 9a be 17 2c bb  |=.bJqJ{.p.l...,.|
    000000b0  3f 29 17 31 95 30 2d ec  1d a9 92 a9 da 69 cd 54  |?).1.0-......i.T|
    000000c0  c7 b4 69 6a 6c 6a 7e 6a  b5 77 24 57 a7 ff 8c c0  |..ijlj~j.w$W....|
    000000d0  2c 78 16 31 a3 32 a3 33  83 72 c6 62 2f 28 8f 59  |,x.1.2.3.r.b/(.Y|
    000000e0  de 4c c4 ac 60 26 7d 26  0f d2 a2 69 9b 35 ce 8c  |.L..`&}&...i.5..|
    000000f0  cd 2c 60 24 64 31 c7 d1  49 64 1e 3a 27 3b a7 3c  |.,`$d1..Id.:';.<|
    00000100  a7 35 67 38 4f e9 e4 3e  e7 3f 17 bd 0f 2e 7d ae  |.5g8O..>.?....}.|
    00000110  60 ae 7c ae b1 57 64 fa  e7 c6 e6 e6 1d 2d bc 3a  |`.|..Wd......-.:|
    00000120  57 0b dc 0b 62 db 21 51  0b ea 0b 7a f6 39 2f f8  |W...b.!Q...z.9/.|
    00000130  ee 83 89 5d 14 2e 64 2e  14 2f d4 2d 6a 17 ba 17  |...]..d../.-j...|
    00000140  cd 0b d3 0b cb 0b db cb  f1 d2 69 40 5f d0 18 89  |..........i@_...|
    00000150  25 b9 65 cc 92 c1 92 f9  92 e3 92 d7 52 d0 52 cc  |%.e.........R.R.|
    00000160  56 bc 6c 29 bf 53 f3 52  d7 d2 48 a7 c5 a5 9d d5  |V.l).S.R..H.....|
    00000170  bb c2 be 22 b0 22 b5 8a  5a c5 ac 62 57 50 ae 52  |..."."..Z..bWP.R|
    00000180  57 ec 57 dc 56 b9 2b 91  2b 29 ab b2 95 c2 95 aa  |W.W.V.+.+)......|
    00000190  55 cd 4a f7 ca c8 ca dc  ca 9a cf d0 67 e6 e3 8f  |U.J.........g...|
    000001a0  ea 2a 27 0a ee 46 b1 61  5e 78 22 f7 c6 13 31 c7  |.*'..F.a^x"...1.|
    000001b0  96 f3 f5 12 be 81 2d eb  55 a5 aa 37 a0 4d 1f d6  |......-.U..7.M..|
    000001c0  58 f6 76 3a f3 0e 80 3c  ab db a3 1a eb cd 64 6f  |X.v:...<......do|
    000001d0  18 d7 5d e7 a2 37 ef b2  7b 53 aa b1 37 6f 86 bf  |..]..7..{S..7o..|
    000001e0  a4 de de 3b ce aa b7 72  62 bd a8 53 ed ad 78 72  |...;...rb..S..xr|
    000001f0  4f 6a f6 be b8 f8 cd 13  79 3d 99 9a cd 0b b4 bd  |Oj......y=......|
    00000200

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