Boot Off Firewire Drive

My internal Superdrive is dead so I always use my external Firewire drive. Well I need to run Disc Utility and it says I should reboot of my OS disc but my internal Superdrive is dead so can I reboot off my external Firewire drive? If so how do I do this? My external drive is a Pioneer DVR-111D if that matters.

Aswell as the Macintosh HD option there should be another box appear with the external drive there. I assume that the external drive works well if you boot into OS X normally(?) 
What kind of OS disc is it that you're using? Is it a retail one or the one that came with your iMac?
Try booting holding Option-Command-Shift-Delete this tells the Mac to ignore it's primary start-up volume and look for another.
mrtotes

Similar Messages

  • MacBook won't boot off Firewire drives

    i just got a MacBook and couldn't be more pleased but i just tried to use the Firewire drive to boot from but it doesn't show up as option for restart. the drives( i tried two) are loaded with 10.4.10 and show up on the desktop and work fine but it's odd the Mac won't boot from them. had no issue connecting to my Pismo. both show up as start up discs. i looked in the forums but didn't see this issue brought up. a little help please.

    Paul Roese1 wrote:
    Does this mean i have to (can i?) install Tiger from my MB's discs on to a connected firewire drive and it can then be used as a start up drive for the unit? Thanks much.
    Yup. Alternatively, you can 'clone' the MB's internal hd to the external firewire hd. Two of the most widely used methods of achieving this are:
    1. Carbon Copy Cloner - http://www.bombich.com/software/ccc.html
    2. SuperDuper! - http://www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/SuperDuperDescription.html
    Kryten

  • MacBook Pro 8,1 beeps 3 times on boot from FireWire drive: why?

    Hi, all,
    about the brand spanking new 13" I bought, I immediately wanted to boot the FireWire drive so I could install Snow Leopard. Install disk image was copied to a dedicated partition on the FW drive to speed up install process.
    Holding the [alt] key during startup leads to 3 beeps that are indefinitely repeated. I also tried to select the relevant partition in the Control Panel Startup Disk. Same result
    Why doesn't it want to start from this image? How can I solve this issue?

    In fact, it is a late 2011, not an early 2011 "New Old Stock", so you're correct it shipped with Lion. But, aside from its weird ergonomics (Dynamically-attributed spaces and different gestures from the previous OS X versions), what turned me off was the official complete impossibility to get a physical copy of Lion at a reasonable price, when it is installed. I also wanted the mounted drives to appear at the top left corner in Finder windows, as they did in pre-Lion OS X, instead of the bottom left. I wanted to put back the Firefox profiles in their place... Turns out the Library folder isn't visible in Lion.
    Simply put, anything I wanted to do to start on the good foot wasn't possible on Lion.
    I went to the Genius Bar, and indeed their own external rescue drive also made the Mac beep. I told them about the Snow Leopard tethered downgrade. They were aware of the method, but there was no Snow Leopard Mac remaining in-store. And with the install DVD causing kernel panics, there was no way to at least try a dual-boot installation (Snow Leopard for mission-critical apps, Lion for playing around with).
    To another Apple-approved place I went. The young tech here was willing to perform the downgrade (since it would have cost me $75/hr), and had both Snow Leopard and Lion machines. But I argued that I wouldn't be willing to pay twice since I intend to switch to SSD in a short while. He then tested when booted from a clone, and Snow Leo half-installed on the internal drive (needs one reboot during installation), but it ended up in kernel panic. Same went when he tried the physical Snow Leopard disk after formatting the internal drive, hypothesizing something detected on it may prevent Snow Leopard installer to boot. It immediately went into a kernel panic.
    Both techs were actually surprised that this signal came out, instead of a message stating (official) incompatibility, as well as kernel panics.
    My hypothesis is there's something in the Snow Leopard installer that accesses the hardware at a lower level during installation, but not during normal execution or Target Mode, hence causing kernel panics in the former.
    What else can be tried, or what else didn't go through my mind?

  • Old G4 won't boot from firewire drive

    I have an older 400 MHz G4 running 10.3.9 and 10.1.5 which will not boot from a firewire system volume. Two system volumes (10.4) on the external drive appear as start up disk choices in the system preferences, but when selected the system displays a folder w/? upon restart and then the system boots from an OS 9 partition on one of the machines internal drives. This happens when the system is restarted from either of the computers boot partitions (10.3.9, 10.1.5). Don't know if this is a software or a hardware problem. Holding down the option key upon restart, even without the external OS 10.4 drive, produces same behavior. System info identifies the machine as a G3 but processor type as G4. It is one of the graphite colored Power Macs.
    Any insights appreciated.

    The G4 PCI graphics PowerMac can not boot off a Firewire hard drive. Check which G4 model you have here:
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=58418
    The G4 AGP and the iMac DV were the first Macs to be able to boot off Firewire.
    It is interesting your Mac identifies itself as a G3. Now it is true that the early G4s were basically a G3 with a slightly modified logicboard and front and side panels (as well as the omission of the ADB port). But there are G4s inserted in some old Blue and White G3s by adventurous upgraders. The Blue and White G3 pictured here can't boot off Firewire either:
    That Mac also can't boot off Firewire.

  • My iMac (late 2006) no longer boots from FireWire drives, although they contain all the system files.

    My iMac (late 2006) no longer starts (boots) from Firewire drives, although they all contain a current system (Mac OS X 10.6.7). If the drives are connected with USB 2, they boot normally. The FireWire drives appear in the Start Volume program, but they do not boot. If I press and hold the Alt key while booting, only the internal drives and the USB drives appear as options. What can I do in order to boot from FireWire drives as I always could in the past?

    I'd first recommend doing a SMC reset and if that doesn't work refer to:
    http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13727_7-10333969-263.html
    and
    http://www.thexlab.com/faqs/firewiretroubleshooting.html
    SMC RESET
    Shut down the computer.
    Unplug the computer's power cord and all peripherals.
    Press and hold the power button for 5 seconds.
    Release the power button.
    Attach the computers power cable.
    Press the power button to turn on the computer.
    PRAM RESET
    Shut down the computer.
    Locate the following keys on the keyboard: Command, Option, P, and R. You will need to hold these keys down simultaneously in step 4.
    Turn on the computer.
    Press and hold the Command-Option-P-R keys. You must press this key combination before the gray screen appears.
    Hold the keys down until the computer restarts and you hear the startup sound for the second time.
    Release the keys.
    Roger

  • Booting from FireWire Drive

    I have a LaCie 160MB (F A Porsche style) external firewire drive.
    I have been able to create a bootable clone of my iBook HD using Disk Utility and the Restore function.
    I have been able to create a bootable partition by installing the System Software onto it.
    But I have not had success using SilverKeeper or SuperDuper! Does anybody know why? I would really like to use the features of one (or another if available) of these applications.
    Thanks.
    -Ted

    Below is LaCie's Tech Support Reply. What is interesting is that they suggest Carbon Copy Cloner (instead of Silverkeeper). Also interesting is that it worked. I hope this helps some of you.
    Ted
    Hi Ted--
    Thanks for contacting LaCie Technical Support. All of our firewire
    drives can be used as boot volumes. Due to differences in operating
    systems and Macs, we are unable to provide support for booting from
    firewire drives other than the following information:
    1. Make sure the Mac is bootable via firewire. All Macs with built-in
    firewire can be booted from an external drive except:
    -Blue and White G3s
    -PCI-Graphics G4s. This can be determined by looking in the Apple
    System Profiler. The PCI Graphics G4s use the same motherboard as the
    B&W, except with a G4 processor shoehorned in.
    2. The drive must be connected to a native port. It will not work if
    the drive is connected to an add-on card.
    3. The Mac must have the latest firmware installed. The proper updater
    can be found and downloaded from here:
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=86117
    Download and read the instructions carefully. It is possible to kill a
    Mac if the update is interrupted. Then, perform the update. If the
    firmware is already current, the updater will report this.
    4. Format the drive fresh using either Apple's Disk Utility in OS X or
    Silverlining in OS 9. Use the Mac OS Extended (HFS+) format only.
    (Journaling may be enabled on OS 10.3.)
    5. If making an OS 9 boot drive, you can just copy the System Folder
    over to the root of the boot volume. To be bootable, the System Folder
    must be blessed, i.e. has a happy Mac face on it. If it does not, you
    can try to force it to bless by removing the Finder from the folder and
    moving it to the root. Then, move the Finder back. The folder should
    now be blessed. If not, then there is probably an issue with the System
    Folder.
    6. In making an OS X boot drive, the ONLY two recommended solutions
    are:
    --install from the OS X install disk, preferably the one which came with
    the Mac. You will not be able to make a successful boot drive using an
    older disk set. A newer disk set should also be fine.
    --use a utility, such as Carbon Copy Cloner, to perform a copy of an
    existing OS X install. It is not possible to do this manually. There
    are issues with permissions, hidden files, and files in use that cannot
    be manually overridden. If you are using a disk image, you will still
    need to use a utility, such as Carbon Copy Cloner, to copy the files out
    from the image to the root of the new boot volume. A simple drag and
    drop will not include the necessary hidden files, such as the boot
    loader and the kernel.
    If the volume does not appear as a Start Up Disk, try booting with the
    Option key held down and see if the drive shows in the boot drive
    selection screen.
    If the volume does not show, or the kernel panics on boot, chances are
    the OS install was not performed properly.
    In general, CD/DVD drives are not bootable via firewire, but will work
    under certain circumstances, usually booting from OS X to OS X. They
    should not be relied upon as such. To boot from one, hold down the
    Option key while booting. If the boot CD shows on the screen, you may
    select it and continue the boot.

  • Won't boot as firewire drive?

    Hey guys,
    So I've read through every post on a ton of websites about this problem and nothing I tried worked. Today I started my computer up as an external firewire drive (holding 't' as it was booting) and it worked normal. However, several hours later I tried it on another computer and for some reason it didn't show up on the other computer. I restarted it and tried it again - no luck. I disconnected the cables and then just booted up like normal and all of a sudden my Macbook Pro took like 1 min longer to boot up than normal (1 min 52 sec). Also, my computer wouldn't shut down - it got stuck on my bg after clearing the finder.
    I proceeded to follow all of the advice I found online: I reset the PRAM and SMC (taking out the battery, disconnecting the power cord, holding power button for 7 s, reconnecting everything), deleted the cache in my home/library/cache, and even repaired the disk and disk permission via the install disk (also repairing disk permission after booting up to see if that would do anything). Somewhere along the way my computer decided that it could now shut down normally (well - it turns off within like 5 - 7 seconds but if I close the lid the little sleep light remains on for another 10...is that normal?) - but I still have the two problems: slow startup and not showing up as an external firewire drive on another computer.
    Anyone have any ideas - or do I totally have to reinstall Mac OS X?

    So tried the previous post and it didn't work. I got fed up so I did an archive install of Leopard using the install disc and the problem STILL won't go away...what else can I possibly do? I thought that was the last resort? Thanks...

  • Re: Old G4 won't boot from firewire drive

    I am having the same problem with one I just received today. I have the AGP one but it will not but off of the firewire drive. Any insights on this?

    Hi, stupidipodnano -
    Okay -
    The firewire drive shows on the desktop, so there is nothing wrong with the Mac's hardware or the hardware for the drive.
    The drive's size, and the OS on it, are not incompatible (OS 9 can not boot from volumes larger that 200GB, but neither of those conditions pertain here).
    That leaves the issue of the installation of the OS.
    • If the OS (OSX 10.4.x) was installed while the drive was connected to a different model Mac, it is probably a model-specific install of the OS, and thus not capable of booting a different model.
    • If the OSX Install CD used is one that came with a different model, and not a retail one, that, too, would result in a non-bootable OS. The disks that come with a Mac are model-specific to that particular model and its hardware.
    • If the OS was copied from another source, rather than actually installed using the installer program, that, too, usually results in a non-bootable installation.
    What format is the firewire drive? You can determine that by doing a Get Info on the icon of the mounted drive.
    Did you reformat (initialize) the drive after gettting it? ...or did you go ahead and use it 'as-is' as soon as you got it? If you did not re-initialize it, it would be a good idea to do so. Note that this will erase everything on the drive.

  • Mac Pro won't boot if firewire drives attached

    New Mac Pro (OS X 10.4.8) won't boot if my two daisy-chained LaCie hard drives are attached (firewire 800).
    I can upnplug 'em and the computer cranks right up; can then plug the drive back in and everything's fine. Wazzup?
    Thanks, Bob
    Mac Pro 2.66   Mac OS X (10.4.8)   User since Apple IIe

    Similar problem with iMacG5 - if two firewire drives on bus wouldn't boot. Worked with one but erratic, also long delays opening files, finder erratic and hanging. Decided it was probably a chipset problem with the firewire bus. Since upgrading firewire enclosures problem gone away (I hope). How old are the drive enclosures. Oxford911 firewire bus has some problems with newer macs and OS. May get information on bus in "about this mac/moreinfo/firewire", or in disk utility window ("applications/utilities/disk Utility") WHEN computer is booted up with drives running.
    OK, a Plug for Macpower's IceCube enclosures, bloody expensive but since I upgraded no problems. Also wiebetech.com have some cool stuff including internal SATA adaptors/cages etc.for older G5's and dual cores

  • K8n won't boot off ATA drive

    So with all this talk of unlocked SATA busses limiting o/c, and my frustration getting the bus over 240 with 5:6 (or even 2:3), or 225 with 1:1 I thought I'd give using an old ATA drive a shot.
    But the board won't boot off it.
    I've tried several installs of XP, formated clean for fat or ntfs, clean or quick, each time after windows copies over all the files and does it's first reboot, the board can't find the OS on the HD.
    NTFS and FAT give slightly different error messages but the error is something like can't find operating system, or bad operating system.
    Not your can't find ntldr or anything that would look software related.
    I even moved the hd from the computer back to my main rig after one of these installs, and it went right into the install program where it shoulld have been.
    !!

    Quote
    Originally posted by sotti
    yeah I ain't no newb.
    wasn't ment personally, it's just that you can never tell for certain on forums
    Quote
    Originally posted by sotti
    I'm on primary master in this box, I rejumpered the drive for my main box as it's a secondary slave there.
    2nd boot device is set to HD (after floppy #1) and in the HD boot order menu it shows only this drive and external card.
    It's completely bizarre
    well it seems more people have these problems. Since I haven't tried yet I wouldn't know what's the trick behind this. Will let ye know more in 2 weeks orso when my exams are past tense

  • Eternal Boot of Firewire drive seems impossible on MacBook- Major Issue?

    I have just purchased my MacBook and guess what I cannot boot off the external firwire drives.
    I have made sure the external FW drives are OSX 10.4.8 (both the Lacie and the Maxtor) These same drives work pefectly booting external to a PowerBook G4 17" and a G5 2 gig.
    So imagine you want to upgarde the MacBooks internal 80gig drive to a new 120 gig (as I do) I run Retrospect to backup the 80gig internal to the FW external. I then want to change the laptop drive to the 120gig drive, boot external to the FW drive and then run Retrospect to restore the original data to my new drive in the MacBook. No Way. You cannot boot of an external FW drive on a MacBook.
    So boot internal, run Retrospect on the FW drive and try to restore over my MacBook boot drive. It starts but crashes leaving your HDD totally ruined. Back to install CD's to get operational but still no data moved accross to the new drive. What a mess. This makes the MacBook a real pain in the proverbial to work with. In fact it make it impossile to do backups using a FW drive and Retrospect. What is the value in that I ask?
    Can anyone shed some light on this?
    MacBook Intel   Mac OS X (10.4.8)   2gig RAM and 120gig HDD

    Yes, if you use the GUID partition scheme the drive will no longer boot a PowerPC Mac. The following article explains a way to get around this and create bootable partitions on one drive: http://www.macosxhints.com/article.php?story=2006061610374449.
    There are currently two different versions of OS X: one for PowerPC and one for Intel Macs. They are not interchangeable. A universal version will not be out until Leopard (10.5) is released next year.
    Why reward points?(Quoted from Discussions Terms of Use.)
    The reward system helps to increase community participation. When a community member gives you (or another member) a reward for providing helpful advice or a solution to their question, your accumulated points will increase your status level within the community.
    Members may reward you with 5 points if they deem that your reply is helpful and 10 points if you post a solution to their issue. Likewise, when you mark a reply as Helpful or Solved in your own created topic, you will be awarding the respondent with the same point values.

  • Can't boot from firewire drive

    Howzit,
    I have partitioned an OWC Mercury Elite-AL Pro 1.5 TB firewire drive into 2 partitions using Disk Utility and GUID mapping. I then used Carbon Copy Clone to clone the startup disk of my MacPro, which runs OS 10.4.11. The clone successfully boots when it is connected to the MacPro.
    The problem is that I am unable to boot from the firewire drive when I hook it up to my iMac. When I restart and hold the OPTION key, the clone appears as a startup option, but the computer freezes when I click on it. The clone also shows up as an option in the Startup Disk preference, but when I try restarting after selecting the clone, it freezes the same way: gray screen, no apple, no rotating gear.
    Can you help?

    Make an OS partition then for each. Or, upgrade your Mac Pro to SL as well. Unless there is software holding you to Tiger.
    Now, when SL came out, I know I saw a lot of threads regarding issues booting from external firewire drives, so you may not be 100% out of the woods, but you should.
    I'd expect to get a panic screen from 10.4, lacks any support for newer hardware / graphics card and more.

  • Trouble booting off FW drive from PBook

    I just got a LaCie Porsche Firewire/USB drive to use as a backup for my 1.5 GHz PowerBook G4 (running 10.4.8).
    I used SuperDuper to clone the enitre PBook drive to the LaCie. Everything went well, but it won't startup from the LaCie. It shows up in the Startup Disk Pref Pane, but even if I pick it, it boots from the internal. Holding Option doesn't bring it up in the list of disks. Holding shift-command-option-delete gives the Question Mark for a second, then it proceeds to boot from the internal drive.
    I know this clone works, because I booted successfully from the LaCie on my G4 iBook using the Pref Pane as well as the Option key method.
    What could be going on with my PowerBook that's preventing it from booting from the Firewire LaCie?
    I've repaired permissions on all drives several times now. I booted into safe mode and repaired permissions from that level.
    PowerBook G4   Mac OS X (10.4.8)  

    Bjorn,
    Thanks for the reply. I was just about to give CCC a try, but I wanted to use SuperDuper, due to the "sandboxing" and easier incrementals in the paid version. So I gave my setup one more scan and noticed that when I formatted the new LaCie drive, I only set the desktop volume to Extended-journaled, not the main drive itself (it was still set to MS-DOS or something.)
    I reformatted the main drive and the desktop volume in Disk Utility, re-cloned with SuperDuper, and the PowerBook booted from the LaCie, first try.
    Thanks so much for the suggestions. I saw a bunch of OF comments regarding firewire drives and was looking for how to do it.
    So add "Make sure your new drive is actually formatted properly" to the troubleshhooting list for external drive/cloning/booting. Duh.

  • Booting from firewire drive does not recognize existing users.

    Hello,
    I just bought a Lacie firewire drive to have a bootable backup of my Macbook internal drive.
    I used SilverKeeper 1.1.4, that comes with the drive, to make a bootable copy.
    The copy is bootable but when Tiger startus up fro the firewire drive I get the presentation video and am asked to setup the system including creating a new user.
    It is as if the existing Users directory, that was copied, is not recognized by the clonned system.
    Running Tiger 10.4.11
    Any ideas?
    Joaquim

    I think this was driver issue

  • Another annoying "won't boot off firewire" thread

    OK, I work at a small charter school with only a single Intel Xserve ("late 2006" model 1,1).
    We have an external GRaid firewire 800 hard drive (this has RAID 0 internally, but appears to the computer to be a single drive). This boots the Xserve just fine when hooked to USB, but won't boot the Xserve when attached via firewire (either 800 or 400). I'm at a loss here, because the drive is supposedly firewire bootable. I do have the drive partitioned, it is GUID, and I've created and booted from many partitioned external drives in the past (although I have never booted this Xserve from external firewire - this is the first time I've tried it with this machine).
    I have a keyboard and monitor actually hooked to the Xserve for now, so I can easily select the "option" key at bootup method and simply select my boot disc. This drive does not show up when hooked up to firewire, but shows up immediately when hooked to USB (but this is far too slow for our purposes).
    What am I missing? (besides my brain, that is...)
    Thanks.

    Turns out the drive manufacturer was simply lying. I called them directly and they tried to give me the runaround about them "not supporting the Xserve" and that I would have to call Apple. At any rate, their attitude demonstrated quite quickly that they knew perfectly well the drive wasn't actually firewire bootable. Too bad as the device was nicely made and very fast on firewire 800. It has been exchanged at the place of purchase for a different firewire 800 drive which is bootable and works perfectly.
    Thanks for trying to help out.
    (And yes, I'm familiar with all popular RAID configurations. The purpose of fast drive was specifically to maintain a high-speed bootable clone, so when one of the drives in the raid 0 fails I can quickly switch over to booting from the external device. We also maintain both on-site and off-site backups. Would love to set them up with a RAID 5 or high-capacity mirrored array on 10k drives, but when working in the education environment, one often has to make due as best as possible with limited funding.)

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