Disk utility restore put recovery hd over mac hd after first properly copying mac hd

I am trying to make a redundant backup image of my harddrive using something OTHER than Time Machine.  I booted to recovery because you image from a disk you are booted from.  The restore took 2 hours, and indicated the entire time in disk utility that it was restoring "Mac HD" to a similarly sized partition on my external hard drive.  When it was done, the external had a copy of my recovery drive on it.  That's crazy talk.

NVM, in a attempt to duplicate, installed lion to the external drive, made a screen recording of disk utility and reran it, and this time, it performed as expected.

Similar Messages

  • Disk Utility in Internet Recovery mode cannot properly detect new hard drive

    I intend to format my new hard rive and install OS X into it.
    Here is my problem, I bought a new 1TB HGST 7200rpm hard disk and put into the macbook. I boot up under Internet recovery mode, under the disk utility I tried format to MacOS Extended Journaled but it takes ages (stuck for more than 15 minutes). I simply just cannot get the macbook to read the drive under disk utility from Internet recovery mode.
    Here are the things that I have tried:
    1. Boot the MacBook from old drive, successfully use the disk utility to zero out format (MacOS Extended Journaled) with 1 partition (GUID). But when I boot the Mac under Internet recovery mode, the disk utility simply cannot mount the drive.
    2. Restore the new drive (as an external drive) from the old drive using disk utility, successfully restore. I could startup the new disk as an external drive, but when I put it into the Mac it shows flashing folder. I waited for more than 30 minutes, the flashing folder just stays there.
    3. Boot the MacBook on Internet recovery mode and connect the new drive as external drive, no problem. I reinstall OS X into it but it midway it stop and error message says something like cannot add additional components.
    Not sure what is the problem, I think I have exhausted all method. There is no issue with the new hard drive and MacBook.

    The MacBook is early 2013. It came with 1TB Mountain Lion, I left the DVD in my country so I don't have it with me. How do I download the installer? the Mac App Store only lets me upgrade the OS to Maverick.
    I have tried to restore the new drive from my old drive, but the only way is to use Internet Recovery. The Disk Utility boot from the old drive OS (Mountain Lion) does not allow me to restore my new hard drive from the old (current boot) drive, the message instruct me to use the Internet recovery mode. From here I can see my new drive format as GUID, but when I boot to Internet Recovery the Disk Utility recognised my new drive format as Master Boot Record instead of GUID...?????

  • "Disk Utility has lost its connection with the Disk Management Tool and cannot continue. Please quit and relaunch Disk Utility."  Trying to format my iomega external HD for use with Mac

    Hi. Trying to connect iomega ext. HD. i have to reformat for Mac. When i plug in & go to Disk Utility,the external shows up and i'm supposed to click "partition". When i do, a box comes up saying ""Disk Utility has lost its connection with the Disk Management Tool and cannot continue. Please quit and relaunch Disk Utility." I quit and relaunched, same results. After googling my question, i came up with this:
    "Disk Utility has lost its connection with the Disk Management Tool and cannot continue. Please quit and relaunch Disk Utility."
    (Quitting and reopening Disk Utility does not help.)
    The following also appears in Console log:
    *** malloc[419]: Deallocation of a pointer not malloced: 0x290a410; This could be a double free(), or free() called with the middle of an allocated block; Try setting environment variable MallocHelp to see tools to help debug : for architecture i386 object: ./Applications/iTunes.app/Contents/MacOS/iTunes malformed object (unknown flavor for flavor number 0 in LC_UNIXTHREAD command 27 can't byte swap it)
    Workaround
    Quit Disk Utility.
    From the Finder's Go menu, choose Go to Folder....
    Type the following, then click OK: /Library/Receipts
    Temporarily remove these iTunes receipts from /Library/Receipts (sort the folder alphabetically as a list):
    iTunes.pkg
    iTunes4.pkg
    You can put them on the desktop, for example. Do not remove iTunesX.pkg or iTunes Phone Driver.pkg.
    Open Disk Utility and repair disk permissions again.
    Quit Disk Utility.
    Put the removed iTunes receipts back in /Library/Receipts.
    Note: This issue does not affect Disk Utility's verify or repair disk features.
    All seemed good, for a moment, until, upon going back to Disk Utility after removing itunes4.pkg and putting on desktop (i did not have itunes.pkg to remove) the same thing was happening. When i highlite my iomega ext. on left of page, disk perrmissions is grayed and does not allow me to click on it. Same problem from the start. Can somebody please help me out here? That would soooo awesome. Thanx!

    i'm just scared i will do something wrong on my own and lose my data.
    You shouldn't be scared of that, because you should already have backups. If you don't have backups, then backing up is the first priority.
    Insert the Snow Leopard DVD and restart. When you hear the chime, hold down the C key and keep holding it until the Apple logo appears on the display. You should now see the language selection screen. Select your language, then choose Utilities > Disk Utility from the menu bar. In the Disk Utility window, select the external drive (not the internal). The drive may already have a data partition, in which case there will be another icon below the drive icon. Choose the drive icon, then select the Partition tab. Create a single partition with the default options (GUID partition table, Mac OS X Extended Journaled).
    When the partitioning is done, select the startup volume on your internal drive in the DU window. Select the Restore tab. Drag the icon of the startup volume to the "Source" field. Then drag the icon of the newly-created volume on the external drive to the "Destination" field. Make sure you have this right. Then click the Restore button, and the data on your startup volume will be copied to the external drive.

  • Disk Utility - Restore can not unmount target drive

    Just got a brand new MacBook Pro with Lion. As usual there are "issues"..
    I wanted to move my old TimeMachine backup (250 GB) to a larger Firewire drive (500 GB) and found a lot of instructions on that.. Problem is they don't work on Lion. (Both are Iomega drives with Firewire)
    The instructions suggest that using Disk Utility to "restore" the new drive from the old will work but I always get the Error "Can not unmount target drive..." and I can see that the source drive is unmounted but not the target.  I did all of the "First Aid" stuff to both drives.. (and the target drive was turned into a MacOS partition and verified..)
    I then tried the exact same process on my old MacBook Pro (Leopard) and everything worked as expected..
    Was there another way to do this in Lion.. or is this broken..???
    Thanks for any feedback..
    John..

    Is the new drive prepped?
    Drive Preparation
    1. If you are preparing an external or a non-startup drive, then open Disk Utility in your Utilities folder.
    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. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID then click on the OK button. Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed.
    4. Select the volume you just created (this is the sub-entry under the drive entry) from the left side list. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window.
    5. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Security button, check the button for Zero Data and click on OK to return to the Erase window.
    6. Click on the Erase button. The format process can take up to several hours depending upon the drive size.
    In Disk Utility you clone as follows:
    Clone using Restore Option of Disk Utility
    Open Disk Utility from the Utilities folder.
    Select the destination volume from the left side list.
    Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
    Check the box labeled Erase destination.
    Select the destination volume from the left side list and drag it to the Destination entry field.
    Select the source volume from the left side list and drag it to the Source entry field.
    Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
    Destination means the new backup drive. Source means the old backup drive.
    If you still have a problem then boot into the Recovery HD:
    Boot to the Recovery HD:
    Restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the COMMAND and R keys until the menu screen appears. Alternatively, restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the OPTION key until the boot manager screen appears. Select the Recovery HD and click on the downward pointing arrow button.
    Choose Disk Utility from the main menu then click on the Continue button.

  • Disk Utility: Restore no longer creates bootable images?

    So I have a new hard drive for my macbook, and followed the procedure I used last time of using disk utility restore to write the current hard drive image to the new disk, with the new disk in a USB enclosure.
    I have done this before, it creates a bootable copy on the new disk, swap the disks away I go.
    This time however the new disk is not bootable. When starting it gets to the grey screen with the rotating white pips then dumps back to a black screen with error messages (like its trying to boot of the network).
    Swapping back to the old disk boots just fine, so its a problem with the image written to the new disk by disk utility restore not being bootable.
    Is this a known issue? I searched the forum with no answers, and am frustrated that its now working as I have run the image twice now at about 5 hours a go for 100GB of data so I am sure its not the copy. Straight after the copy the original disk has about 10 more files than the new disk that's just been imaged, has their been some update to disk utility in the OS X patches that means it no longer copies some key files?
    Note that partition on new disk is GUID as it should be, and I don't want to re-install anything from the install media I want to use make disk utility work as designed.

    I found two references that may help:
    A) At http://everythingapple.blogspot.com/2007/11/use-powerpc-mac-to-create-bootable.h tml it says "PowerPC Macs use the Apple Partition Map, but this poses no problem for Intel Macs, even though Intel Macs use the GUID Partition Table. The reverse is not true however. PowerPC Macs cannot boot disks with a GUID Partition Table."
    1. Open up Disk Utility and select your backup drive. Select the "Partition" tab.
    2. Go to the "Options" and choose "Apple Partition Map", which is the partition type necessary for PowerPC Macs.
    B) Carbon Copy Cloner - Red Dot Warning on main screen: "The target volume will not boot this computer because PowerPC Macintoshes cannot boot from USB devices."
    Looks like I'll have to install the 2.5" SATA drive into my PowerPC MacMini to upgrade my system volume from 80gb to 320gb.

  • Disk Utility Restore - Why error -34 ?

    I cloned my 700 G3 iBook's 20GB hard drive to a 30GB ext. HD with Disk Utility>Restore before sending it for repair. Now that I have gotten it back I want to restore the data to the computer's HD. I'm getting error -34 (disk full).
    So what is the nature of my problem? Must the destination disk be at least as big as the source disk? (Because it is copying the entire 30GB size.) Or must I empty (erase, reformat) the destination disk? (Because it is adding the data to what is already there.)
    Thanks

    Michael:
    You were right. Thanks. The data would have been added to what was already there.
    While I had made back-up clones before, this was the first time I needed to put it back into the computer's hard drive.

  • How to clone disk (Disk Utility Restore, boot: kernel panic)

    Hi, I've tried two times to clone my 120GB system disk (old Core2Duo Mac Mini (macmini2,1)) to a 1TB disk attached via USB cradle. Running Snow Leopard 10.6.8 which long time ago was upgraded from Leopard.
    Used the Disk Utility "Restore" for cloning. Both times Disk Utility completed without errors. However when I swap the 1TB from USB cradle into mac mini (to internal SATA), the result of even a "Save Mode" boot attempt with Shift/Mod key held is always a kernel panic: "unable to find driver for this platform: \"ACPI\"
    As my goal is to clone the existing system to a larger drive, a new install of OS X on the 1TB drive is out of the question. The original 120GB disk boots without problems. But the cloned attempts do not boot.
    Judging from the kernel panic it is as if "Restore" doesn't actually restore, but leaves out files. Thus Disk Utility restore in SL is buggy?
    Or is my cloning method wrong? Currently I just drag the 120GB system disk (the live running system) to the Source, then drag the 1TB USB disk to Destination, and allow full erase of destination, and do the priviledge elevation to root i.e. the usual password prompt. Does successful cloning need something extra...?

    If I understand correctly, what you're doing is copying your 120 GB drive to the 1 TB drive, then swapping the 1 TB drive into your Mac and trying to boot from it, and it fails.
    You're doing it wrong, and that's why it fails. A Finder copy (what you're doing) does not respect permissions or symbolic links, which are required to make the system boot. You need to use something that does respect that.
    Get your hands on a copy of SuperDuper http://shirtpocket.com/
    (free for basic use, but it's well worth the small fee of $27.95 for full access to all features); and/or
    Carbon Copy Cloner http://bombich.com
    and use one of those to make a bootable clone of your 120 GB drive, then you can boot from it.

  • Using Disk Utility Restore function to clone external hard drives

    Hi all,
    I have a WD 3Tb My Book external hard drive which I want to use as a replacement for an older WD 1Tb My Book external hard drive. I would like to use Disk Utility's built-in Restore function to clone my old external hard drive onto my new external hard drive. Unfortunately, Disk Utility will not allow me to drag the new drive to the "Destination" box; I can drag the old drive to the "Source" box just fine. Why is this? Am I doing something wrong?
    It might be important to note that my old external drive is formated to FAT32, whereas the new drive came pre-formatted to NTFS. Do I need to reformat the new drive to FAT32 before dragging the disk to the "Destination" box? In other words, do the source and destination drives need to be the same format in order to use Disk Utility's Restore function?
    Thanks very much in advance.

    Are these drives being used on Windows machines? If so then you will need to create a new partition from the Partition Scheme dropdown menu after which you can set the scheme to MBR. If the drives are being used only on the Mac then you have to prep the new drive as follows:
    Drive Preparation
    1. Open Disk Utility in your Utilities folder.
    2. After DU loads select your hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. 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. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID (for Intel Macs) or APM (for PPC Macs) then click on the OK button. Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed.
    4. Select the volume you just created (this is the sub-entry under the drive entry) from the left side list. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window.
    5. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, check the button for Zero Data and click on OK to return to the Erase window.
    6. Click on the Erase button. The format process can take up to several hours depending upon the drive size.
    After you copy your files from the old drive to the new one you want to repartition and reformat the old drive in the same way as outlined immediately above.

  • Disk Utility Restore

    I copied my macbook pro's hard drive to an external drive using disk utility restore. Is it normal for the copy's overall size to be smaller than the original? I thought it would be the same size? The external had no data on it. The original is 273.54 GB and the copy is 271.45 GB... Problem?

    May I try to answer your question. When you copy a disk there are a number of files which are not copied such as Trash, swap files and any temporary files that may have on the old disk will not be copied to the new disk. So while the approximately 2 GB of data might at first glance seem like a lot, it is in fact not really that much. I hope that helps you to understand what is happening there.
    |___________________
    Allan

  • Disk Utility Restore Process Input/Output Error

    <Image Edited by Host>
    My niece's MBP specs above. If I posted a picture of this poor machine, there'd be a lynch mob of passionate Apple fans arrive at my door wanting a public hanging...It's been dropped no less than a dozen times. (The ethernet port is stretched out of shape so badly that a standard plug will no longer fit the port!!!).
    Among other physical injuries, the screen won't present an image (just flickers white lines on black background, hinge has partially detatched, suspect the ribbon that transmits the display signal has been compromised). A visit to the Apple store tells us (by plugging into a cinema display via TB) that the hard drive is still in tact and data is salvageable. Keyboard and trackpad both work fine (surprisingly).
    Long story short, she's acquired a new MBA, been read the riot act about looking after it, and I have the unenviable task of salvaging her data, approx 275Gig.
    My objective is to obtain:
    1. A full copy of the data (existing file structures) - Complete
    2. A bootable disk image of the MBP - Incomplete and troublesome
    I have at my disposal:
    Mid 2011 27' iMac (Intel i7) on Mav
    MBPr13 (third host if needed) on Mav
    A home ethernet network with enterprise grade switching
    A Lacie 5BigPro 10TB NAS
    A couple of 1 & 2 TB Toshiba external drives, and
    Enough network adapters, USB cables and thunderbolt cables to suffice. Admin priviliges all round. All disk permissions repaired.
    Current connection config is the MBP thunderbolted to the iMac. I can use TDM (if I need to interface with the MBP using the iMac display) or can boot in Target Disk Mode if I want to see the MBP disk image on the iMac.
    Regarding Objective2: A bootable disk image of the MBP, I first tried to use the Restore function in Disk Utility, but that only works when booting the host in Recovery mode, whcih doesn't support TDM, so I'm flying blind...
    Next try, I booted the MBP in Target Disk Mode, which allowed me to use the Restore process from the iMac's Disk Utility, select the MBP HD, and target an external drive (one of the Toshiba's) plugged in to the iMac via USB.
    I've now tried this Restore 3 times, each time getting the following I/O error (at about 45 munites in to a projected 4 hour process):
    Any thoughts on root cause?
    And (given my screen/display limitations) am I missing a far simpler option?
    Cheers, Sla

    If that were the case you would not get in/out errors. These errors occur because the drive is no longer able to transfer data which is a hardware failure.
    If you want to post an image to the forum then you need to open the message editor and click on the Camera icon you will find in the editor's toolbar. Then select the image you wish to post and click on the Insert button.
    You can try running the Apple Hardware Test to see if it reveals anything.
    Using Apple Hardware Test
    Intel-based Macs- Using Apple Hardware Test

  • Moving backups to new drive -- without using disk utility restore

    Hello,
    I have done some research on this already but I don't believe I've found the solution. I just bought a new media / backup hard drive, and I've moved my itunes library (over 100 GBs) to this drive. Now I have researched how to move the time machine backups to this drive, and know you can't just copy the files.
    The instructions I've received tell me to use the disk utility to restore the old time machine backup drive to the new drive, however if I do that won't I lose the iTunes stuff currently on that drive?
    Is there an easier way to move that data without me transferring the iTunes back to my laptop, and then restoring through disk utility, and then re-transferring the iTunes again?
    thanks,
    James

    jimumbra wrote:
    Hello,
    I have done some research on this already but I don't believe I've found the solution. I just bought a new media / backup hard drive, and I've moved my itunes library (over 100 GBs) to this drive. Now I have researched how to move the time machine backups to this drive, and know you can't just copy the files.
    The instructions I've received tell me to use the disk utility to restore the old time machine backup drive to the new drive, however if I do that won't I lose the iTunes stuff currently on that drive?
    yes, you will. but it is also a VERY bad idea to keep other data on the same partition as the TM backup. first, this data will not be backed up by TM. if you value your itunes data you should have it backed up. also, TM is very buggy and there are too many situations when you need to delete existing TM backups and start from scratch. this should be done by erasing the entire TM partition. you should never delete any TM backups from finder. also, TM will eventually fill up the entire partition with TM backup. it will start bumping up against other data on the partition and you won't be able to put anything else on it.
    the upshot is that you should make a separate partition just for TM. don't keep any other data on that partition. you can add a partition to the drive without disturbing your itunes data. type "create new volumes" in disk utility help to see how. however, that's not a good idea IMO as you'll have both the itunes data and the TM backups on the same physical drive. when the drive fails (and it will eventually) you'll loose everything.
    Is there an easier way to move that data without me transferring the iTunes back to my laptop, and then restoring through disk utility, and then re-transferring the iTunes again?
    thanks,
    James

  • Disk Utility Restore from Sparse Image taking forever

    I created a sparse image backup of my MBP C2D using SuperDuper! before sending the laptop back to Apple for repair. I wiped the drive clean before shipping. I now have the laptop back and am trying to restore the sparse image to the HD.
    The sparse image file is on an HD in my G5 tower and is just over 108 GB. I booted the G5 into target disk mode and connected it to my MBP via FW800. I then booted off the Leopard install disk and launched Disk Utility to do the restore.
    The sparse image mounts fine in Disk Utility and is specified as my source for the restore.
    I started this restore last night before I checked out for the night and when I got up this morning, Disk Utility showed about 35-40% of the image had been restored and 14 HOURS were remaining. That seems a little excessive after it had already been running for well over 9 - 10 hours.
    The sparse image mounts on the MBP just fine using target disk mode from my G5 -- so as far as can tell, my backup image itself is ok.
    My question is this: is the Restore function performance of Disk Utility with sparse images really this bad or is something wrong with what I am doing? I really don't want to rebuild my laptop from scratch, but if I have to wait 34 or more hours for Disk Utility to finish a restore -- it might be quicker to rebuild it.
    Any ideas out there?
    Message was edited by: Randy Vose

    Randy Vose wrote:
    I created a sparse image backup of my MBP C2D using SuperDuper! before sending the laptop back to Apple for repair. I wiped the drive clean before shipping. I now have the laptop back and am trying to restore the sparse image to the HD.
    The sparse image file is on an HD in my G5 tower and is just over 108 GB. I booted the G5 into target disk mode and connected it to my MBP via FW800. I then booted off the Leopard install disk and launched Disk Utility to do the restore.
    The sparse image mounts fine in Disk Utility and is specified as my source for the restore.
    I started this restore last night before I checked out for the night and when I got up this morning, Disk Utility showed about 35-40% of the image had been restored and 14 HOURS were remaining. That seems a little excessive after it had already been running for well over 9 - 10 hours.
    The sparse image mounts on the MBP just fine using target disk mode from my G5 -- so as far as can tell, my backup image itself is ok.
    My question is this: is the Restore function performance of Disk Utility with sparse images really this bad or is something wrong with what I am doing?
    no the restore function is not this bad.
    something must be wrong with your sparse image. you should have tested it before sending the computer for repairs. and why did you use a sparse image at all?! you should have made (and tested) a standard clone.

  • Disk Utility - Restoring a previous image

    Since I first bought my Mac Mini (February of this year) I've been using the disk utility to make occasional backups (disk images) of my partitions, in case I ever need to restore a whole partition (or create a clone of an existing partition - for example, so that I could test some new software that might cause problems). I've never actually needed to restore a partition (or produce a clone from one of the backup images) until today. However, when I first bought my Mac I did test this feature and it seemed to work.
    A few days ago I realised that I'd soon need to clone a partition so I backed up my Mac HFS partition which is about 90GB in size (my internal disk being 500GB). I then used Coriolis iPartition to create a new, empty Mac HFS partition of the same size, then tried to use Apple's Disk Utility to restore the newly created disk image. However when I came to try the restore, I got an error saying that the image would first need to be "image scanned" before being usable. I then tried an old image that I created when I first bought the Mac and currently, that one seems to be restoring.
    AFAIK I've used the same method to create both images so why did the old one work when the new one didn't??
    Message was edited by: johne53

    Hmmm.... I've just realised that none of the images I've created recently will verify properly. They all get to the end of the first stage (block checksum of partition #1) and then fail with "internal error". The only one which passes the verification process is the very first one which I created a long time ago. That one seems to complete two stages of block verifications (for 2 partitions) then one "file checksum".
    If I try to select a disk image and use "Open Disk Image" (from the right-click menu) I get an error saying "Unable to attach [image-name].dmg. No mountable file systems." This happens with every disk image I've created, apart from the very first one.

  • Disk Utility: Restore Failure-Source image needs to be scanned for restore.

    Hello guys,
    I have a .dmg (source image) that I have created from a DVD by myself (read-only format).
    I am trying to restore it to a destination and a Restore Failure notification pops-up as follow:
    "Restore Failure
    Could not find any scan information. The source image needs to be imagescanned/scanned for restore"
    I am quite new to Mac. Half of the time, I don't really know what I am doing - but just relying on the 'Help Menu', some research for guides on the internet and most of all read-on most of the posting here in the Apple Forum for what I want to do or might have encountered. Lastly to hopefully also speak the Mac language. For example - What's a disk image? What a .dmg? What's a source image? and etc. ~Lost~
    So for this case, I am totally lost as I can't seems to understand what does the Restore Failure notification mean at all as I quote above. What does it mean by the Source image needs to be imagescanned/scanned for restore? What do I do from there? How do I scanned my source image? Is there a steps that I miss out while creating .dmg from the DVD?
    Could not find any scan information? What scan information? Where do I go to asked for scan information?
    I am so lost that I don't even know the right question to ask or begin with.
    I know what I want to do and believe it can be done with Mac. But I just doesn't seems to understand the concept of how it really works yet but to just follow blindly throughout the guides.
    So please help me if possible.
    Thank you in advance.
    Best Regards,
    Jon Gan

    Hi,
    If you open Disk Utility, select the Image in the disk util sidebar, and click on Images > Scan for restore... in the menu bar, it will take care of it for you. After that you can perform a restore as you were trying to do.
    They do this so that disk util can verify your data after the restore to make sure it copied exactly.

  • Disk Utility ate my Recovery HD

    If you want to keep your Recovery HD intact, use Disk Utility only from the internal drive (Macintosh HD or Recovery HD itself).
    Disk Utility running on an external start-up disk will delete Recovery HD without warning if you partition, erase or restore a volume on the internal drive.
    I bought my Core i7 iMac two days after the public release of Lion, so I cannot get a Snow Leopard install DVD for the machine (I asked), and it doesn't have the Lion Internet Recovery feature that new models will be getting (Cmd-R doesn't work on the erased disk, I've tried). Off-the shelf Snow Leopard install DVDs cannot start-up this machine (I've tried).
    I've done a complete reinstall (including the Recovery HD 'partition') using a Recovery HD I created by restoring the doubly-hidden BaseSystem.dmg to another external drive. I know that Apple have gone to some lengths to protect the Recovery HD from idiots, but it is a bit concerning that what may be the ONLY way of starting-up current models bought since the release of Lion is dependent on software hidden on the internal HD - most users won't even know if it's gone missing.

    NVM, in a attempt to duplicate, installed lion to the external drive, made a screen recording of disk utility and reran it, and this time, it performed as expected.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Color changes when creating PDF in Acrobat X Standard

    I'm printing to PDF from Word 2010 by using Acrobat X Standard.  Here are the two issues: I have overlaid two text boxes (different colors) on top of each other.  The overall image should be blue on top and bottom with tan in the middle.  When I prin

  • Read cluster PCL4 .. takes lot of time

    Hi guys,   Though I Know this is a functional related forum, i would want to post  techincal question related HR ABAP. I have a report that needs to read data from PCL4 cluster and display master data changes for an employee. Developed a big program

  • Trouble playing MOV file in Windows7

    Let me start off by saying that this does work in windowsXP I have a file that was created using Autodesk 3d max and saved in a .mov format. The file is a panoramic image where you can click and drag to change the view. When I try to open the file on

  • Problem docking 3G iPhone to play music

    I have a Bose sounddock portable which they sell at the Apple store. My original iPhone worked perfectly on it. Its feature of the phone I use most. The 3G iPhone produces a booming pop through the speaker every 3 minutes exactly. I've tried airplane

  • Certficate validation question

    When validating CA issued or Self signed, does it verify the expire time of the certificate and what are the consequences if the certificate is expired? Basically in my application to connect to email server on SSL port I'm using self signed certific