Clean install OSX Lion

i am selling my macbook and have upgraded from 10.6 to lion and want to clean install lion without having to purchase how do i make a lion disk/usb?

You can use the Recovery Partition already in place on your Macbook.
From Apple: http://www.apple.com/macosx/recovery/
Also, this might be helpful:
http://www.macworld.com/article/161088/2011/07/hands_on_lion_recovery_mode.html

Similar Messages

  • How do I do a clean install from Lion download

    how do I do a clean install from Lion download ?
    My old tower will only stretch to Lion which I have had to download and installed it following the instructions.
    My local Applestore genius has told me to do a clean install but I don't have or can't find a copy of the Lion osX to use.
    Applegadge

    Welcome to the Apple Support Communities
    If you are already using OS X Lion, use OS X Recovery to reinstall OS X and erase the disk. See > http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4718
    Follow these steps:
    1. Make a backup of the data you don't want to lose after erasing the hard disk.
    2. Start your computer holding Command and R keys to start in OS X Recovery, and open Disk Utility.
    3. Choose "Macintosh HD" or the OS X partition in the sidebar, go to the Erase tab and erase the disk.
    4. Close Disk Utility and reinstall OS X

  • Help to do Clean install OSX Mavericks

    I am using osx Mavericks now by upgrading from osx Mountain Lion, I am not feeling better after upgrading, so decided to clean install Mavericks on my Macbook Pro13' 2012 model.Can anyone please assist me to do clean install osx with directions means step by step or picture view.If anyone help me to do this i fell

    The default solution for installing OS X Mavericks is to download it free app store and then perform an upgrade from a previous version of Mac OS X, whether that’s from Mountain Lion or Snow Leopard. Upgrades are fast, efficient, and most important, very easy, and that’s the recommended option for the vast majority of Mac users. Nonetheless, some users may want to start fresh with a blank slate, using what’s known as a “clean install” and that’s what we’re going to cover here. Performing a clean install can be desirable for a variety of reasons, from ditching years of built-up cruft on older Macs from many years of OS X upgrades, to troubleshooting difficult issues, to transferring ownership of a Mac to a new owner.
    The process of a clean install is not difficult if you follow these instructions, but because it involves formatting the Macs hard drive, it can result in extra work. Since the Mac will start with a clean slate, all apps must be downloaded and installed again, important documents and personal data must be manually transferred back over from backups, and system settings must be customized again. This typically makes it more appropriate for advanced users or for select situations (like selling a Mac), and thus it should not be considered a standard upgrade path to get to OS X 10.9 Mavericks.
    Warning: Performing a format and clean install of OS X will erase the Macs hard drive and all contents on the drive will be removed. All files, applications, documents, photos, customizations, everything on the computer will be lost in this process. Understand this and know what you are doing, and why, to prevent data loss of critical files. We can not reiterate this enough.
    How to Format & Clean Install OS X Mavericks on a Mac
    You will need a bootable OS X 10.9 installer drive to accomplish a clean Mavericks install using this method. You can learn how to easily create one here if you haven’t done so yet.
    Back up the Mac first with Time Machine or by manually backing up your important data – do not skip this step or else you will not be able to recover files
    Connect the bootable OS X Mavericks installer drive to the Mac and reboot the computer
    Hold down the OPTION key during boot until you see the boot selector menu, then choose “Install OS X Mavericks”
    At the “OS X Utilities” screen, choose “Disk Utility”
    Select the hard drive or partition to format from the left menu, then choose the “Erase” tab
    Select format type “Mac OS Extended (Journaled)”, give it a logical name (like Macintosh HD), and choose “Erase”, confirm to erase at the next screen
    When finished erasing the disk, quit out of Disk Utility to return to the normal boot menu
    From the “OS X Utilities” menu, now choose “Install OS X”, click “Continue” and agree to the terms of service, and select the freshly formatted “Macintosh HD” drive to begin the clean install process
    (Excuse the unusual picture quality, some images taken with an iPhone 5 during the boot install process where screen shots are not allowed)
    A clean installation of OS X Mavericks takes about 35-45 minutes to complete, depending on the speed of the install drive and the volume OS X is being installed onto. When Mavericks is finished installing, the Mac will reboot itself automatically and go through the initial setup process for OS X Mavericks. Register, create a user login, set the Apple ID and iCloud details, and you’re all done. You’ll boot directly to a very blank OS X installation, similar to the experience of getting a brand new Mac.
    A fresh OS X installation is very bare with just about nothing included outside of the core system and basic Mac apps (intentionally so), thus any custom applications or apps you had previously downloaded from the web or App Store will need to be downloaded and installed again. For apps from the Mac App Store, that’s fairly easy, but for third party apps you will need to access them independently through the developers.
    If you are keeping the Mac yourself, you will probably want to transfer your old data, documents, photos, and files back onto the Mac. This is a good time to access Time Machine to selectively restore certain files, or access backups made to network drives, DropBox, CrashPlan, external backup drives, USB flash disks, whatever your preferred backup method is and from where ever stored your data.
    SRC - http://osxdaily.com/2013/10/26/clean-install-os-x-mavericks/ 
    <Edited By Host>

  • After installing OSX Lion I am not able to find my preference files

    I am having troubles with iCal and iPhoto since installing OSX Lion so I went to trash my preference files in user/library/etc but find no Library folder and within a folder called Clean Library/preferences there are no preferences files as in the past.  Any clues?

    In Lion the Finder folder is now invisible.  To make it permanetely visible enter the following in the Terminal applicaiton window: chflags nohidden ~/Library and hit the Enter button on the keyboard.
    OT

  • Installing OSX Lion on OSX Mountain Lion Partitioned drive-Help/Advice please

    I have my late 2009 27" iMac running OSX 10.8.5 Mountain Lion but need to install OSX Lion on a separate partition and would appreciate help / procedure advice as to how to do this safely.
    I need to do this because I have found that running FCP7 Studio under 10.8.5 there's some missing or odd keyboard and Timeline functions that were not there under Lion and FCP7 is a valuable tool for me that I don't want compremised. I'd like to be able to run FCP7 / Lion in a separate partition on the iMac.
    I have partitioned the HD and there's about 700gigs of clean space on the second partition. I also have downloaded from my account on the App Store a copy of Install Mac OS Lion to my Applications folder and I also have a copy of it on a USB Thumbdrive.
    So, what do I do now to safely install the second OS without messing up everything else that's on the machine in the prime partition?
    Thanks!

    Ok….I managed to work it out…..Installed Lion on the second partition, working fine now.
    PM

  • Clean Install of Lion OS X

    Hey ,  I was curious how to do a clean install of Lion OS X and so that no one can recover any past information.
    I am selling it and don't want anyone to be able to recover ANYTHING.

    Don't suppose you kept a copy of the Lion installer file? If so, you can make a boot disk using Lion Diskmaker:
    http://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/39701/lion-diskmaker as it will save you having to re-download the 4gb+ file.
    If not, boot into the Recovery HD (Command+R on start-up) and erase and re-install.
    Here's pondini's tips for doing it: http://pondini.org/OSX/Combo.html
    And Apple's: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4718?viewlocale=en_US&locale=en_US

  • How to do a Clean Install of Lion

    Hope this will help someone.
    I recently did a clean install of Lion on my Mac Pro (after doing an earlier Lion upgrade) and the performance difference is absolutely amazing. Before my Mac Pro was laggy and there all kinds of little glitchy bugs (I'm sorry I can't explain it better than that) with a lot of my applications. Since I use that machine to also administer the network, that just wasn't acceptable.
    I'm convinced, after this experience, that a clean install of Lion is the best thing for me, so, this morning I decided to do the same thing to my MacBook Air (IMHO the best laptop ever invented).
    Here's what I have done.
    1.  Download and install Carbon Copy Cloner to the laptop.
    2.  Clone the laptop hard drive to an external hard drive. I have a Seagate 500GB USB drive which had a 500GB partition with Lion already installed on it. There are instructions all over the web on how to install Lion to an external drive. I used disk utility to add a partition, effectively splitting the partition in two with Lion still installed on one of the partitions and the other partition "clean".
    3.  Donate to Mike Bombich's site. Carbon Copy Cloner is a remarkable program - I've paid a heck of a lot of money over the years for similar programs and they didn't work 1/2 as good.
    4.  Go into System Preferences, select the "Startup Disk" applet and select your Lion install on the external hard disk drive as the startup disk. I SUSPECT you could also set the cloned laptop partition as your startup disk, but since the Lion install was already on my external drive, I used that.
    5.  Reboot the laptop
    6.  Hold down Command + "R" during the startup process to boot to the recovery partition of the Lion install on the external disk.
    7.  When the menu pops up, select Disk Utility
    8.  Repartition your laptop hard disk drive. This will also erase everything on the laptop. You can not repartition your hard drive unless you are booting from an external install of Lion. The recovery partition is hidden so repartitioning the drive will fail if you try to do a clean install from your laptop.
    9.  When the partitioning is finished, quit Disk Utility and return to the previous menu.
    10.  Select "Reinstall Lion" and select your laptop hard disk drive as the target.
    11.  You'll have to authenticate to Apple with your Apple ID, so there should be no problem with downloading and reinstalling Lion.
    12.  Wait for the download and install to finish. The download will take longer than the install.
    13.  During the setup, use the Transfer Assistant to transfer the cloned drive items to the new Lion install.
    When the TA and install is finished, you should be back to where you started with everything intact.
    Good luck!

    Hope this will help someone.
    I recently did a clean install of Lion on my Mac Pro (after doing an earlier Lion upgrade) and the performance difference is absolutely amazing. Before my Mac Pro was laggy and there all kinds of little glitchy bugs (I'm sorry I can't explain it better than that) with a lot of my applications. Since I use that machine to also administer the network, that just wasn't acceptable.
    I'm convinced, after this experience, that a clean install of Lion is the best thing for me, so, this morning I decided to do the same thing to my MacBook Air (IMHO the best laptop ever invented).
    Here's what I have done.
    1.  Download and install Carbon Copy Cloner to the laptop.
    2.  Clone the laptop hard drive to an external hard drive. I have a Seagate 500GB USB drive which had a 500GB partition with Lion already installed on it. There are instructions all over the web on how to install Lion to an external drive. I used disk utility to add a partition, effectively splitting the partition in two with Lion still installed on one of the partitions and the other partition "clean".
    3.  Donate to Mike Bombich's site. Carbon Copy Cloner is a remarkable program - I've paid a heck of a lot of money over the years for similar programs and they didn't work 1/2 as good.
    4.  Go into System Preferences, select the "Startup Disk" applet and select your Lion install on the external hard disk drive as the startup disk. I SUSPECT you could also set the cloned laptop partition as your startup disk, but since the Lion install was already on my external drive, I used that.
    5.  Reboot the laptop
    6.  Hold down Command + "R" during the startup process to boot to the recovery partition of the Lion install on the external disk.
    7.  When the menu pops up, select Disk Utility
    8.  Repartition your laptop hard disk drive. This will also erase everything on the laptop. You can not repartition your hard drive unless you are booting from an external install of Lion. The recovery partition is hidden so repartitioning the drive will fail if you try to do a clean install from your laptop.
    9.  When the partitioning is finished, quit Disk Utility and return to the previous menu.
    10.  Select "Reinstall Lion" and select your laptop hard disk drive as the target.
    11.  You'll have to authenticate to Apple with your Apple ID, so there should be no problem with downloading and reinstalling Lion.
    12.  Wait for the download and install to finish. The download will take longer than the install.
    13.  During the setup, use the Transfer Assistant to transfer the cloned drive items to the new Lion install.
    When the TA and install is finished, you should be back to where you started with everything intact.
    Good luck!

  • I need to do a clean install with Lion. How do I do this. I can't find any doc. to tell me the procedure.

    I need to do a clean install with Lion. How do I do this. I can't find any doc. to tell me the procedure.

    Follow the instructions at the link I posted 
    have a lot of old stuff transferred from Mac to Mac to Mac that is slowing down everything
    If that included Power PC apps, read here >  Lion upgrade questions and answers:  Apple Support Communities

  • Help with installing OSX Lion on iMac with broken display

    Hi,
    Having some trouble installing OSX Lion on my 5 year old iMac which has a broken display.
    The display has been dead for a couple of years now and I've been using an external monitor without any problems. Today I decided to upgrade to Lion - I downloaded the installer from the App Store and started the install which rebooted the machine. After reboot I'm presented with a grey 'thatched' background image on the external display and nothing else, no menu bar, installation menu etc.
    I presume the internal display is showing the menu I need but I can't see it as that screen is broken. Is there a way to turn on mirroring during the install process so I can use my external display? I've tried various shortcuts held down during startup - OPTION-F14, CMD-F1, CMD-F2 - but none have worked.
    If this isn't possible, is there a way to abort the Lion install process and go back to using my Snow Leopard install? Whenever I boot the machine I am taken to the OS X Lion installer and don't know how to get back to my Snow Leopard install. I tried holding down OPTION key on startup to choose the list of available OS installs, but again, the internal display is being used so I can't see what to do.
    Thanks in advance for any help.

    Genius idea, thank you. Was able to step through the install procedure using voiceover and the screenshots on this page http://www.macstories.net/mac/os-x-lion-installation-guide-boot-discs-and-qa/
    Definitely a first for me, installing an OS with voice only

  • How to Create a Bootable Flash Drive to do a clean install of Lion.  I have tried to use the InstallESD.dmg but it still will not do a clean install so that I do not have to do a reinstall from the Recovery (That just re downloads and takes over 6 hours)?

    How to Create a Bootable Flash Drive to do a clean install of Lion.  I have tried to use the InstallESD.dmg but it still will not do a clean install so that I do not have to do a reinstall from the Recovery (That just re downloads and takes over 6 hours)?
    The system I'm have is a Mac-mini that had SL on it and no SuperDrive.  I have also call Apple Support and they have really have not been to much help over 1st did my up grade to Lion and Installed the Lion Server.... it lost my SSL that I paid for and kill almost on of my server setting, plus kill all my web servers (using apache vhosts), and not to say the LDAP will even let remote users login to your laptops.
    PS: There is no way that I'm going to buy a Install USB from Apple... They have over billed me over $300.00 because the Apps Store still has bugs (Glad I did not write that App/Service)
    If there is anyone that can give in the information to create a USB install stick, I would be very thinkful.

    Here you are bro, courtesy of "softpedia.com"....brilliant site!!!
    If you ever had problems with your Mac OS X installation you know that the first thing you should do is to check the startup volume using Disk Utility.
    After the check has ended and, if the errors exceed a certain level of seriousness, the Disk Utility application will require you to restart your Mac and use its Mac OS X Install disc counterpart.
    Other users may have to reinstall OS X altogether, but will find, or already know, that their SuperDrive (a CD/DVD reader and write combo drive) is not functioning properly and it will not be able to read the Install disc.
    Although this might happen to Mac OS X Leopard users due to faultyhardware, the vast majority of problematic SuperDrives will be encountered inside Snow Leopard running Macs.
    This is due to the updated SuperDrive firmware included in either the Install disc or the software updates one has to install to reach the latest version of OS X, namely 10.6.6.
    This can be fixed by flashing the SuperDrive’s stock firmware using free command line tools that one can find for free online (I will write about this process also, but at a later time because this article only focuses on allowing you to create your own alternative USB boot disc).
    If you are reading this last bit of information with skepticism, than you should know that it happened to me too. Despite all my tries to make it work properly, the SuperDrive kept on munching any inserted DVDs and just popped them out in about twenty seconds.
    The workaround to this issue was to create my own Leopard bootable USB memory stick. I am not suggesting a Snow Leopard bootable stick mainly because there are lots of users that have decided to buy the cheaper, Upgrade version, which I have not tested and, therefore, I’m not sure if it will work properly once written to a USB disk.
    And now, here are the exact steps you should follow in order to obtain a fully bootable Leopard (or Lion) Install disc.
    Step 1 (If you already have the Leopard install disc DMG file you can skip to Step 2)
    Launch Disk Utility (you can find it inside /Applications/Utilities). Here select the Leopard Install disc in the list of drives on the left and click on the New Image menu entry at the top of the window. A save message will appear where you will have to select the Desktop as a destination.
    Step 2
    After Disk Utility has finished creating the Leopard DMG, insert your USB stick and erase all data and reformat the disk. To do this select the USB in the list of drives on the left and, after clicking on the Erase tab on the right side of the window, choose the Mac OS Extended (Journaled) format and click the Erase button beneath.
    Step 3
    After the USB has been reformatted, download the SuperDuper app from HERE and launch it. Once SuperDuper starts, you will only have to select the DMG in the Copy drop-down menu, your USB memory stick on the right and hit the “Copy Now” button.
    One can also use Disk Utility for this task but creating a bootable USB stick failed 2 out 4 times when copying the DMG to the stick (with the exact same settings each time). Creating the bootable stick using SuperDuper proved to be the perfect way to do it because it worked each of the 4 times I tested it.
    The steps above can also be used to create a bootable Mac OS X Lion USB by using the InstallESD.dmg image you can find inside the Lion installer (named “Install Mac OS X Lion.app”) downloaded from the Mac App Store in the /Applications folder.
    To locate the InstallESD.dmg right click the Lion installer, select the “Show Package Contents” entry, go inside the “Contents” folder, and from there into the “SharedSupport” folder. Inside this folder you can find the InstallESD.dmg you can use to create your own bootable Mac OS X Lion USB stick. To do so, go to the third step described above and use the InstallESD.dmg as the DMG to be copied to your USB disc.
    That’s it! Once the process ends you will have a fully bootable Leopard (or Lion) USB disk that you can use as an alternative to the Apple’s DVD Install disc that comes bundled with all Macs.
    To use your newly created bootable disk you will have to restart the Mac, press and hold the OPTION key until the StartupManager appears. Here, select the Mac OS X Install disk using your keyboard arrows and press return to start from the selected drive.

  • Can I do a clean install of Lion, onto my Mac Book Pro4,1, that is currently running 10.5.8? I have seen U-tube videos on how to do a clean install to Snow Leopard, and another from SL to Lion, but can zero out my HD, and do a clean install to Lion?

    Can I do a clean install of Lion, onto my Mac Book Pro4,1, that is currently running 10.5.8? I have seen U-tube videos on how to do a clean install to Snow Leopard, and another from SL to Lion, but can zero out my HD, and do a clean install to Lion?

    See this article.

  • Is it possible ro clean install Mountain Lion over Mavericks on a brand new mac mini

    Is it possible to "clean Install" mountain lion over mavericks on a brand new mac mini

    Actually evrything I can find states that the last mini to run SL was 2010.
    It appears that the 2012 mini's shipped with Mountain Lion and later Mavericks. Link
    Also why would the OP need a bootable SL installation media when they want to install ML?

  • My Contacts, Calendars are NOT syncing on a Clean Install of Lion

    I did a Clean Install of Lion Yesterday and for some reason, my Contacts and Calendars are NOT syncing into my laptop.
    Am I missing a setting somewhere?

    I forgot to mention, the ODD thing, my bookmarks DID sync into Safari.

  • How can I restore my contacts from a snow leopard time machine to clean instal of Lion

    I recently did a clean instal of Lion (which was wayyyyy to difficult by the way--why this wasnt an easy option to begin with I do not know and am not happy about).
    In my sleep depravation from the previous problem I accidentally synced my contacts from mobile me to take my computer contacts (deleting all my contacts from my phone and computer).
    Fortunately I have a back up on my time machine from my previously installed Snow Leopard.
    I tried to restore these files, but they seem to not be compatible.
    Steps I took:
    1.) -Opened Address Book in Lion
    -Opened time machine
    notes: i could not go backward in time with lion address book
    2.) -Copied files from time machine address book to desktop
    -completely unable to open files.
    I do not want to use migration assistant because it seems to want to take ALL my files over and frankly thats not what I want to do at all.
    PLEASE HELP!

    Hi,
    See this Excellent Link by Pondini on TM:
    http://web.me.com/pondini/AppleTips/Index.html
    May be Helpful...

  • New boot drive and a clean install of Lion

    I have a Mac Pro with multiple internal hard drives.  My Lightroom catalogs are on one disk, my actual photos are on another, and my OS is on a 3rd.  I recently decided to upgrade my 7200rpm SATA boot drive to SSD.  In the process, I also did a clean install of Lion.  None of my data was moved, as it was all on separate internal drives.
    I have the new OS installed, and I reinstalled Lightroom 3.  I should also mention that whenever I import files from CF cards (using a card reader), I import as DNG.  I only shoot RAW.
    When I launch Lightroom and look at my previous work, or the shoot that I was working on prior to the upgrade, I notice that (at least) the following is missing: flags, ratings, edits.  I think I can live without the flags and ratings (though I would love to get them back), but I thought the whole idea of DNG was to store the sidecar "edits" file with the RAW file in one package.  Shouldn't I be able to see my crops, treatments, localized brush edits, etc.?
    What am I doing wrong and what can I do to remedy the situation?
    Thanks very much in advance.

    You need the original catalog file. You should have copied this over to your new instillation and then just opened it, rather than reimporting files.
    If, as you seem to be saying, your catalog is not on the OS disk then all you need to do is open this after reinstalling LR, rather than creating a new catalog as you seem to have done. Just find the original catalog and open it from LR, or double click on it from Finder when LR is closed.
    If you have not kept a copy of the catalog file, then you could use your most recent back up of the catalog, hopefully you made regular backups using LR's backup system and did this to a separate drive.
    However if you have re imported the files then any edits that have been actually saved to the files will be read by LR. You do have to actually write the edits to the files, either by choosing to do this automatically in LR's preferences or by clicking on the update metadata in LR, otherwise these edits are not written to the files (or as xmp files when using propitiatory file types. If you didn't write the changes to file then LR has nothing to read.

Maybe you are looking for

  • H:commandButton - jsf navigation problem

    Dear All, I changed the first page of my application from pageA.jsf to pageB.jsf in the index.jsp file: <jsp:forward page="/pages/pageB.jsf" /> The pageB.jsp is a new page that I just created. (I have <servlet-mapping> <servlet-name>Faces Servlet</se

  • Can I access an import source file in CRM?

    We've had a user export and re-import some data a few weeks back that's caused a bit of a problem on our CRM 2013 system which has only just come to light (audit histories now refuse to load). I'd like to see the source file that was imported so that

  • Report with both read-only and uploadable features

    Client would like to use one report as both an uploadable report and as a read-only report, depending on user. Is there any way to have a report which gets security based on the user making the request, say, by hiding the upload button for the user w

  • No response from itunes

    I have a new shuffle and it everything worked fine when I first set it up and after plugging it in a few times to sync some new music. It quit working so I assumed the battery died. I plugged it into the port and got no response from itunes - just th

  • Does Mountain Lion also run without installing lion bevore?

    Hey, I want to install Mountain Lion. Do I have to install Lion first or not?