Bootcamp doesn't detect internal drive

When i try to use Bootcamp on my MacBook Mid 2010 it asks me for external drive. But my model has an internal drive which seems not to be detected by Bootcamp. Somebody knows how to fix this?

I get it on the second window where i can check the download for the support software and the Windows 7 install. No matter what i check, it says "No USB-Drive - No USB drive is connected to the system, connect a USB drive to succeed." (translated from German)
I try to install Windows 7.
Maybe with  OSX 10.9.2 its not possible to install from DVD?

Similar Messages

  • HT3986 my new macbook pro doesn't detect usb driver

    During Bootcamp installation, MBP doesn't detect USB driver before/after finishing virus scan checking.
    system finder has USB driver directory as the below snapshot, but "NO USB Drive" warning continuously.

    During Bootcamp installation, MBP doesn't detect USB driver before/after finishing virus scan checking.
    system finder has USB driver directory as the below snapshot, but "NO USB Drive" warning continuously.

  • [SOLVED]fdisk doesn't detect hard drives

    As I'm progressing with installation of Arch, new problems come
    When trying to partition brand new drive during the installation process, I've ran into problem that the drive isn't detected at all. I have 3 physical drives on this machine, including brand new SSD I want to work with (install Arch on), HDD with Windows and external USB stick which I booted from. However, while running either fdisk -l or lsblk only USB stick was to show up as physical drive. (There were other devices of type "loop" showing up when running lsblk, I don't think that they have smth to do with my issue) Important may be that both internal drives are connected to SATA3 ports, though BIOS can see them (and even boot Windows from) perfectly well.
    Googling didn't really help, people were experiencing same problem with external USB hard drives, and the only solution related to Linux was to modify kernel to extend USB storage delay, but there are no parameters like that to work with SATA.
    SOLUTION: so the problem seems to be with SATA3, one needs to switch drive loading option from IDE to AHCI in BIOS, though nothing like that is on wiki.
    keep creating unnecessary topics :uneasy:
    Last edited by L1ghtmareI (2014-08-30 08:56:30)

    Quote
    ps: i wanted to set them both on RAID-0... is this possible even thought they're ATA devices, and not SATA?
    ...nope...your motherboard only supports SATA RAID...
    ...try connecting a single HDD as master on the first IDE channel...
    ...how many optical drives will you have?..

  • Macbook Pro won't detect internal drive.

    So Last night my macbook pro fell off a desk about 2 feet high. At the time I was running Iweb on it. I thought everything was okay but after about 15 minutes it bagan acting slow. When I would click something it would take about 5 seconds for the computer to register the command. I thought maybe it was more due to being on all day. So I figured I would give it arrest. I shut my computr down and went to bed.
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    Does this mean my Drive is just dead. I never backed up any of my files. I was thinking about buying an external hard drive from fingerhut since it's the only kind they have up there and they do financing. http://www.fingerhut.com/product/Electronics/Computers-Tablets/Hard-Drives-Stora ge/Western-Digitals-500GB-External-Hard-Drive/pc/25275/c/25299/sc/25844/NT324.ut s
    My warranty just ranout 6 days go >_< is there anything I could do to fix my hard drive?
    Also could it be a bad connection to the drive and not the drive itself. If I take it to the apple store can they figure out which one is the problem?

    I was thinking about buying an external hard drive from fingerhut since it's the only kind they have up there and they do financing. http://www.fingerhut.com/product/Electronics/Computers-Tablets/Hard-Drives-Stora ge/Western-Digitals-500GB-External-Hard-Drive/pc/25275/c/25299/sc/25844/NT324.u t s
    I can understand that financing is important if you really need to get something but can't put up the full price.  That drive goes for about $99 (US).  Fingerhut is selling it to you for $150 (that's a 50% markup).  If you're financing a product in this range, I'd imagine you really need to look out for what you spend...  keep in mind, you're tossing $50 away in doing so.

  • IMac 24" 3.06 GHz doesn't detect internal hard drive

    Hi Guys,
    I'm panicking because my four month old Imac is suddenly refusing to boot up into OSX and I don't understand why.
    When I switch it on, I'm faced with a flashing folder and a question mark.
    This problem has come completely out of the blue as all I did was switch the machine on and suddenly, it didn't work! I could understand it if I'd been fiddling with something or installing new hardware but no...
    I have tried many things on the apple help pages but all to no avail. The last thing I tried was resetting the PRAM.The start up noise is louder now but that's the only difference I can tell from performing this action.
    The trouble is the hard disk doesn't seem to be recognised at all, and when I boot from the cd, I access disk utility but my hard disk is not there so it cannot be repaired!!
    Also, the disk is obviously not present when I try and do a new install. How can a disk fail after four months?? Is this the reason or perhaps a loose connection?
    I'm really hoping that someone can help me fix this as I have no idea what to do and I don't want to send it in, because I have sensitive financial and personal data on there which wasn't intended to be shared.
    Should I perhaps open it up and attempt to see if a connection is loose?
    Many thanks in advance...

    It sounds like you have tried what Apple recommends in this article:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/TS1440
    DO NOT OPEN IT UP this will void you warranty!!!
    The next step would be to bring it in for service, you are covered by warranty so I wouldn't worry and hopefully you have been keeping backups on TM. If you have when you bring it in let Apple know and they can give you instructions on how to restore all of your data. If you purchased AppleCare you are still covered by telephone support and can call them Monday morning, they might have some other tips before you bring it in.
    Regards,
    Roger

  • OS 10.4.7 on a G3 - doesn't detect internal modem. How to solve?

    The OS X 10.4.7 was recently installed on my iMac G3. However, when I access Systems Preferences, then Network, the Internal Modem option desn't show up.
    Since I would like to use the internal modem to access the internet, can anyone please help me solve this problem?
    Thanks.

    Is the modem currently plugged into a phone line? If not, perhaps not having an active phone connected to the modem makes the choice to select it unavailable. I'm not sure if Apple makes its software "that smart" but I wouldn't be surprised...
    If you do have an active phone line plugged in, maybe it is a malfunction in the modem itself.
    Did this iMac previously boot too Mac OS 9? If so, and a bootable System Folder is still available, a good test would be to start up in Mac OS 9 and see if the modem works. I've heard Mac OS X is sometimes flakey about using a modem.

  • HT3669 Hi! I just bought an old printer, an Epson stylus color 740 and my computer doesn't detect a driver to install it.

    I tried with download.com and the drivers seem corrupted. And this model is listed on the apple website. Where can I find a reliable place to download this? I have a macbook pro.
    Thanks a lot everybody!!

    Well. Peter Bannon is correct in that you can download the Epson drivers (although they're 1.05 GB in size). My previous suggestion was meant to just get the small portion of that 1.05 GB file that you need.
    The "try later" usually means that Apple's update servers are temporarily down, and that often gets corrected within a few minutes.
    Restarting can never hurt.
    Unfortunately, I think that you do need a specific driver for the Epson 740. I don't think you can use a "generic USB driver" (as you _can_ for many network printers).
    Jim

  • Success: moving bootcamp partition to an external drive

    Background
    Due to the relatively small, non-exchangable SSD on my Mac, I'd limited the bootcamp partition to 50GB when installing Windows. I needed to install new software in Windows, but was running out of space fast and didn't have the necessary space on the Windows side. I don't use Windows that often and for that reason, I wanted to move the Bootcamp partition to an external hard drive, freeing up space for the Mac side on the internal SSD. I'd read many conflicting reports on the web, some claiming they'd done it successfully, while others said it would be impossible, because Windows 7 wouldn't run from an external drive. I had a HDD in a USB 3 enclosure, and first tried to install Windows to this (using various guides on the web). I was very close to success with this USB 3 drive, but Windows would fail during start-up. Most reports claiming to have successfully been able to run Windows 7 from an external drive, had used Thunderbolt drives, so I decided to get myself a Lacie Rugged USB 3/Thunderbolt series Solid State Drive.
    Hardware used
    MacBook Pro 15" Retina Display (mid 2012), 2,3 GHz Intel Core i7, 8GB RAM, 250GB SSD
    Lacie Rugged USB 3/Thunderbolt series, 120GB Solid State Drive
    Software used
    Mac OS X Mavericks, 10.9.2
    Windows 7 Ultimate
    Plus several free downloads from the internet, see description below.
    Procedure
    Step 1: Get the Thunderbolt drive to work under your Bootcamp Windows 7 installation.
    This should be simple enough, but proved to be a little tricky. Here’s what I did (assumes you are running Mac OS X before you begin):
    1. Make sure your Thunderbolt drive is disconnected before proceeding.
    2. Restart your Mac and hold down the option key (alt key on some keyboards) during startup.
    3. Choose the Windows drive to start up Windows 7 on your Bootcamp partition.
    4. After log in to Windows 7, download the necessary driver software for your Thunderbolt drive (find it at the manufacturer’s homepage of your Thunderbolt drive - in my case lacie.com).
    5. If the downloaded driver installer is in a compressed format (like zip for example) be sure to decompress it before running the driver installer.
    6. Shut down your computer.
    7. Connect your Thunderbolt drive to your computer.
    8. Start up in Windows 7 (see items 2 & 3 above) and if it all went well, you should now be able to see your Thunderbolt drive under Start>Computer.
    Step 2: Format your Thunderbolt drive in NTFS-format.
    Still running Windows 7 with your Thunderbolt drive connected and visible to the system, it is now time to format your external Thunderbolt drive in NTFS-format. There are several ways of doing this. I used the procedure described here at tedhhack.co.uk.
    Step 3: Follow the directions at intowindows.com to clean install Windows 7 onto your external Thunderbolt drive.
    As described at intowindows.com, this involves downloading Windows Automated Installation Kit (WAIK) and running command line tools. At step 9 in the described process at intowindows.com, at the point where the installer asks if the drive you are installing to is a USB hard disk, the correct input is Y for yes, even if your external drive is a Thunderbolt drive (and obviously not a USB hard disk).
    At step 10 in the described process at intowindows.com (Reboot your PC), remember to hold down the option (or alt) key at every restart in the installation process, so as not to start up in Mac OS X. Also, since your machine now has two Windows 7 installations, Windows Boot Manager will appear and ask you to “Choose an operating system to start” and there is a list of two Windows.
    I don’t know how to tell which one is on the external drive and which one is on the internal drive at this point, but I started with the top one on the list and this turned out to be the one I wanted (the newly installed one on the external drive). If you pick the wrong one (on the internal drive) at first, simply restart the computer and choose the other one. You know you got the right one when the installation process continues and asks for further input.
    After the Windows installation is complete (there will be at least one other restart required - remember to hold down the option (alt) key to start up in Windows, and choose the same Windows on the list in the Windows Boot Manager), you’ll be running a freshly installed, but crippled Windows 7, as you still haven’t installed the specific drivers for your hardware. But don’t worry, that will be fixed in the next step.
    Step 4: Clone your Bootcamp partition from your internal drive to the external Thunderbolt drive.
    In this step you will copy all the software, drivers, settings and other files from your Bootcamp partition on your internal drive to your external Thunderbolt drive. The easiest way to do that is to clone your Windows partition - and to that end you’ll need to download some free software: AOMEI Backupper Standard 2.0 fits the bill perfectly, as it will let you clone at the same time as resizing the partition to fit your external Thunderbolt drive (I went from a 50GB internal Bootcamp partition to a 120GB external Thunderbolt SSD).
    1. Download  AOMEI Backupper Standard 2.0 (I used the 17MB download for Windows 7), install it, and run it.
    2. In the left column choose “Clone” and in the right column choose “Partition Clone”. By choosing Partition Clone instead of Disk clone, you won’t ruin the newly created (but invisible) boot partition on the external Thunderbolt drive.
    3. Press Next and choose your internal Bootcamp partition as the Source Disk.
    4. Press Next again and choose your external Thunderbolt drive (your newly installed Windows 7) as the Destination Disk.
    5. Press Next again and you’ll get a warning that you will erase the contents of the destination partition and it asks if this is what you really want to do. Press Yes to this question.
    6. Next screen is an Operation Summery. Toward the bottom of the Operation Summery screen there are a few interesting options: Edit Size of Partition, Clone Sector by Sector and Align Partition to Optimize for SSD.
    7. If your destination partition is larger than your source destination like mine was, press Edit Size of Partition. This will take you to another screen, where you can drag to resize the partition. I dragged this all the way to the right to give Windows 7 the full size of my external Thunderbolt drive.
    8. Leave the checkbox Clone Sector by Sector unchecked.
    9. If your external Thunderbolt drive is an SSD, put a check in the checkbox entitled Align Partition to Optimize for SSD.
    10. Now press the Start Clone button.
    11. When the cloning process is done, exit AOMEI Backupper and restart your computer (holding down the option or alt key) to start up in your new clone of your old Windows 7 with all the same software, drivers, settings and files.
    Step 5: Enjoy running all your Windows 7 applications from your external Thunderbolt drive!
    Step 6: Here is where I need help/advice – can I remove the Bootcamp partition on my internal drive now?
    I am reluctant to entirely remove the Bootcamp partition from my internal drive, as I am unsure whether this will disable me from starting up in Windows. I would love to hear from anyone here with insight on the matter.

    Step 6: Here is where I need help/advice – can I remove the Bootcamp partition on my internal drive now?
    To answer my own question in Step 6 above, no, or at least I haven't found a way yet...
    Here's what I've done so far:
    Used the Bootcamp Assistant to remove the bootcamp partition on my internal drive.
    Booted the system with the option (alt) key pressed down and now there was NO Windows drive to choose.
    Therefore I used the Bootcamp Assistant to install Windows back onto my internal drive (including installing Bootcamp drivers in the Windows environment). This time I chose the minimum partition of 20GB for the Windows installation on the internal drive.
    Booted into the new Windows on the internal drive and installed the drivers for my Thunderbolt drive.
    Restarted with the option (alt) key pressed down, chose the Windows drive, but Windows Boot Manager still didn't pop up to allow me to choose the Windows installation on the external Thunderbolt drive.
    Booted from the Windows DVD and chose Repair.
    Restarted with the option (alt) key pressed down, chose the Windows drive, and now Windows Boot Manager finally popped up, which allowed me to choose the Windows installation on the external Thunderbolt drive again, phew!
    So, I can run Windows 7 from the external Thunderbolt drive, but I have to use 20GB of my internal drive for a Windows installation I'll never use. Not the best solution, but at least I've saved 30GB of space compared to my previous Bootcamp partition - and I now have enough space to install the Windows 7 software I need on the external Thunderbolt drive...

  • How small can I make the boot camp partition on my MacBookPro internal drive?

    it seems that in order to get Windows7 on to my old non supported MacPro 1.1 that I need to firist install onto this mid 2009 MacBook Pro I want to do the install onto an external firwire800 hard drive which I have formater and Downloaded and installed the Windows support folder using the boot camp installer but the installer wants to grab 20 gig of my internal drive for the win 7 install what is the minimun that I must have on the internal drive to install and use win 7 on the external drive?
    is ther annother way to get Win7 onto my MacPro1.1 where it can live on an internal drive of its own. I do not have have it running on this MBP5.3 other than to get it running (64 mode) on the old tower In addition to the MBP I have at hand the esternal drive a blank 16 gig thumb drive and a firewire800 external DVD drive that I use mostly as a burner on the macpro as it is faster than the internal superdrive that it came with

    I assume that is a product so then I can remove the bootcamp partition from my internal drive and boot to the firewire 800 drive or do I need to have a SSD drive inside the macbookpro first?

  • My Mac doesn't detect my windows DVD for bootcamp, help?

    hi , i just grab my Windows 7 DVD for installing windows on Mac using bootcamp , but my mac doesn't detect my windows installation disc in boot menu... how to resolve?

    You're not alone - I'm installed Windows (8 Pro 64-bit) on a MacBook Air Mid 2013 yesterday from the OEM/system builder media, and Boot Camp Assistant 5.0.4 didn't recognize the DVD. It asked for an .iso disk image instead, and I created one in a UNIX geek way**, but if you're an average mac user, you'll want to create one using the Disk Utility:
    1) Open the Disk Utility. This is in the Utilities folder (go to a finder window and type command-shift-u)
    2) Click on your DVD to select it.
    3) In the File menu, select New -> Disk Image from "HRM_CCSA_X64FRE_EN-US_DV5"… (or your Windows disk title)
    4) In the Save sheet, select Image Format: DVD/CD master. The Disk Utility saves this with the file extension/type .cdr, but this is the same file format as .iso. When the Disk Utility has finished, find the file you save and change the file extension to .iso.
    5) Launch Boot Camp Assistant and select the .iso file as the source of your Windows installation.
    Since I have a MacBook Air, the windows source was copied by the Boot Camp Assistant to a USB flash drive. MacOS X restarted and Windows was installed automatically, but the Boot Camp driver installer wasn't automatically launched at the end of the Windows install. I opened the flash drive's BootCamp folder and double clicked setup.exe.
    Voila! The best trackpad anywhere! Network! Sound! Brightness control from the keyboard! The best Windows 8 computer!
    ** In Terminal: diskutil list; diskutil unmount /Volumes/HRM_CCSA_X64FRE_EN-US_DV5; sudo dd if=/dev/disk2 of=win8pro.iso. Use the output of 'diskutil list' to match your Windows 8 CD/DVD to a disk# for the 'dd' command. Be very careful.

  • I'm seeing the "No" sign on Startup, and my internal drive doesn't show up.

    Good day to you all. It's my first post here and I come to you in desperation.
    Last night, i was browsing the internet and syncing my iPhone. Suddenly my iMac froze and there's no way to restart it but to press the back button. Upon restarting, it showed me the Apple logo then a few minutes more it showed me a "No" sign (ie. No Parking circle.) Noticing that this is a serious one, I pulled out my Snow Leopard installation disc and restarted the system. Last night, I managed to see the internal disk listed in Disk Utility, but it's in red. The partitions (Mac OS X and Windows XP via Boot Camp) can be seen but cannot be accessed. Desperate and tired, I slept the night off.
    This morning, I tried my luck again. Fired up the iMac with SL inserted, opened up DU, and my internal drive is not in red anymore. I managed to open my Mac but I really noticed the sluggish performance. A couple of hangs later, I had to restart again using the button at the back, and there it was again: No sign. But now it's even worse. I can no longer see my internal drive in DU. Tried almost everything: resetting the PRAM (holding the X button) and pressing the C with SL disc inserted just doesn't cut it. The odd thing though, is when I press the Option key upon startup, I can see all the partitions (Mac OS X, Windows XP, Snow Leopard disc.) But upon clicking Mac OS X always ended up with the "No" sign.
    I'm really desperate since I although I'm using Time Machine, I know I exempted some folders in there. Can you suggest some more instructions to make my internal drive show up? Is there a Terminal command of such kind for it? I hope my drive is still okay since I can still see all of the partitions via Option.
    Any help is appreciated. Thank you so much in advance!

    kaloyster,
    Welcome to Apple Discussions.
    From what you are describing it looks like your HD has either fully failed or is failing. I would suggest taking it in for service. The good news is you have been using Time Machine so you have a backup of most of your system. As you may know TM does not backup any MS Windows data.
    If your machine is still covered by warranty or AppleCare this should be pretty painless. If you are not covered by either then just contact an Apple Authorized Service Provider and bring it in. The contact information in your country is:
    Philippines 1-800-1441-0234 www.apple.com/asia/support/
    Regards,
    Roger

  • Disk Utility says everything's fine, but Install disk doesn't find my internal drive as a possible destination. When I startup with Command   S, I get a looping "cannot mount errno = 19" message.

    Disk Utility says everything's fine, but Install disk doesn't find my internal drive as a possible destination. When I startup with Command + S, I get a looping "cannot mount errno = 19" message.
    Problem started when I used Tech Tool Pro 6 to "de-fragment volume". Had to cancel that process before it finished because I ran out of time. Thereafter, when I startup my machine normally, I get the gray Apple logo at first, but it changes to a prohibited symbol (circle with a slash thru it) and hangs.
    When I startup holding the Option key, I can see my internal drive, but I get the same results as above.
    When I startup using the MacBook OSX Install DVD, it does not find my internal drive as possible destination.
    When I startup using the MacBook OSX Install DVD and then run Disk Utility, it finds my drive, allows me to "repair" and says everything is fine.
    When I startup with Command + S, I get a looping error message "errno = 19" and cannot stop it to do anything else.
    When I startup from Disk Warrior v4.4, it does not find my internal drive to do any repairs.
    When I startup from Tech Tool Pro 6 and run the "computer check" diagnostics, everything passes but the Volume Structure, which fails at "Volume Extents (B-tree)." When I use TTP's "Tools" option to run "volume repair" it will show my internal drive and allow me to click the GO button, but nothing happens and nothing changes.
    I have a Time Machine backup on an external USB drive, but for as long as the internal drive doesn't mount, I can't use the backup to restore.

    It's a false report and should be ignored.
    I would not rely on TT as I've already said earlier even before Grant posted similar advice.
    I really think the Rigid Disk Block may be corrupted. This holds the partition map and could prevent a volume from being unmounted. Unfortunately, there is no way to fix that without repartitioning the drive which will remove everything. So, before going down this road I hope you have backups or can make a backup.
    Drive Partition and Format
    1. Boot from your Snow Leopard Installer Disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button.  When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu.
    2. After DU loads select your hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Note the SMART status of the drive in DU's status area.  If it does not say "Verified" then the drive is failing or has failed and will need replacing.  SMART info will not be reported  on external drives. Otherwise, click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
    3. Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to one. Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID then click on the OK button. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed.
    4. Quit DU and return to the installer.  Proceed with reinstalling OS X.
    5. Download and install Mac OS X 10.6.8 Update Combo v1.1.

  • Disc stuck in disc drive but computer doesn't detect disc

    I put it in and it's stuck, and I tried a bunch of methods, but the computer doesn't detect the disc and I can't get it out. Help please!!!!

       If you have not tried any of these steps, try it.
       1. Restart the computer and hold the trackpad down.
       2. Launch iTunes and eject from there.
       3. Launch Terminal.
        Applications > Utilities > Terminal
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  • I cloned my internal drive to a larger drive... bootcamp issues...

    MacBookPro unibody 2.66... 10.5.8
    i want to swap a larger drive into my laptop... old 320g for a 7200rpm 500g...
    i cloned my internal drive to the larger externally enclosed drive... it took 4.5 hours with copycatx...
    before i physically swap the two drives, i want to be sure i can do the following...
    i'll need to use the new available free space (167g...) for at least one new mac partition to run as a separate boot-up...
    i understand there are issues with bootcamp when either resizing or partitioning....
    i took a look with disk utility to see the free space and perhaps format that space for the other mac bootup... i saw a warning that bootcamp might get affected...
    i then took a look with drive genius.... when i looked at the repartitioning page, i saw no warning...
    i formatted the free space as journaled hfs+...
    when i attempt to run "vmware fusion" to launch the windows partition i get an error of the partition not meeting it's original specs... something like that... i tried a few things from within "vmware fusion"... reassigning the windows partition... importing... nothing doing...!
    my question is for someone who has specifically done a cloning of a dual boot disk drive onto a larger drive, swapped out the drives and has successfully commandeered the remaining free space as a new mac partition...
    seems like something that should be easy enuff to do....?
    but perhaps it needs a more exact path for success...
    help....?
    thank you...
    M

    Hi M,
    a later done partitioning to add additional partitions to a harddisk alters the position of the BootCamp partition in the partition table so that the Windows Bootloader can not 'find' the Windows partition.
    With Windows XP it helped to simply edit the Boot.Ini file and point it to the WIndows partition.
    With Vista and Windows 7 there no longer is a boot.ini but EasyBCD http://neosmart.net/dl.php?id=1 can do the same.
    One thing to remember though is, that even Vista and Windows 7 'suffer' from the limitation of four partitions on one harddisk immenent to the Master Boot Record (MBR) since Apple EFI/GPT/MBR emulation can not handle Extended Partitions and Logical Partitions inside an Extended Partition.
    Regards
    Stefan

  • HT1567 When running diagnostics, iTunes doesn't detect an optical drive at all.  What do I do next?

    When running diagnostics, iTunes doesn't detect an optical drive at all.  What do I do next?

    I think, no... I know you failed to provide complete details of everything that had been attempted.
    Then you responded with a smart donkey comment.
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