Download Boot Camp again after hard drive upgrade?

This is just a quick question. If I put a new hard drive in my MacBook, will I have to get Boot Camp again, or can I just partition the drive before I reinstall Tiger, and just install Windows with the driver CD I already have from last time? And I suppose I would also like to know if I have to get Leopard in order to get Boot Camp.

You would need Boot Camp and currently it is offered only with Leopard. Not sure if you could install it on a separate non Boot Cam partition and get it to work right.

Similar Messages

  • Spinning beach ball after hard drive upgrade

    Im running a macbook pro i7 2.2ghz  8gb ram  version 10.6.8 SL
    I recently upgraded my 128gb ssd to a 512gb ssd drive.  I cloned the drive to new drive and ever since then, I get the spinning beach ball very often whereas I never got it prior to the hard drive upgrade.  Is there anything I can check or do to eliminate the freeze ups?  It is VERY annoying.  Or do I just need to do a fresh install on the new hard drive.
    thanks in advance

    Did you properly prep the drive first:
    Drive Preparation
    1.  Boot from your OS X 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.
    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 (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.

  • How do I reinstall my operating system after hard drive upgrade on MacBook pro?  I have Snow Leopard install disc

    How do I reinstall my operating system (Snow Leopard) after a hard drive upgrade. I did a Time Machine backup before the new hard drive was installed. I put in the Snow Leopard install disc and don't get the icon I'm supposed to double click to install Snow Leopard and then the backup.
    HELP PLEASE!!

    Is the new HHD in the MBP?
    Is the new HDD formatted Mac OS Extended (Journaled)?
    Where is the old HDD? In an enclosure?  What is on the old HDD, your user data?  Is the Snow Leopard System on it?
    Do you have a separate Time Machine Disk with your user data?
    Answers to these questions should give an exact status of your situation so that one can proceed in the right direction.
    Ciao.

  • IPod sync problems after hard-drive upgrade/change

    Hello all,
    Can anyone PLEASE help?
    I have just had my hard drive upgraded/changed from the original 640GB drive to a new 2TB drive. I've also had an additional 4GB of RAM added to now give me 8GB RAM.
    Absolutely everything else seems to be working fine (unusual for me and I'm often at the end of bad luck in such circumstances). The only thing I'm having problems with is syncing my iPod Classic with iTunes. Incidentally, I have the latest version of iTunes and my iPod software was up to date  the last time I checked.
    Before I go further, my system specs are:
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    24-inch, Early 2009
    Processor  2.66 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo
    Memory  8 GB 1067 MHz DDR3
    Graphics  NVIDIA GeForce 9400 256 MB
    Software  OS X Mountain Lion 10.8.2 (12C60)
    When  I connect my iPod Classic, the iPod screen initially shows  'Synchronisation in progress' (or whetver similar wording it actually  is)... but this is just very briefly. It then indicates "Connected", and  that's the way it stays and doesn't change at all.
    It takes time to actually show up in iTunes, and when it does, I now have to very quickly click the iPod button (to bring up the iPod screen on iTunes) before the pointer turns into the spinning beach ball.
    Now, it hangs... and hangs... and hangs... and hangs.
    During this, I notice that "Manually manage music and videos" is ticked (which I didn't have ticked before), and also 'Enable disc use' is also ticked, although greyed out.
    Occasionally, the spinning beach ball will disappear and the pointer will return, but this is very very briefly and I have a split-second to try unticking - first - the "Manually manage music and videos" box and then - later, if I'm lucky - untick the 'Enable disc use' box. However, on the odd occasion I've managed this, I haven't been able to go further except for two occasions when I managed to click "Apply". The iPoid on those to occasions started to update... but went nowhere... it just did nothing.
    When the thing finally just hangs and hangs, I eventually have to 'force quit' iTunes and unplug the iPod without first ejecting. There was one other occasion when I managed to - split-second when the spinning beach ball disappeared - to click "eject" and the iPod succesfully did so.
    There were a couple of occasions in the past when I had trouble with my iPhone and was told to delete/trash the iPhone photo cache folder. Remembering this, I tried this for the iPod (iPod photo cache) and it made no difference... same situation.
    I did notice on one occasion at the beginning of all this that when I managed to unplug my iPod from iTunes, all the album covers were missing from the iPod (although still in iTunes). This was long before I tried deleting the iPod photo cache folder though.
    Any help would be greatly appreciated.
    Best regards
    BionicDan

    First things first the spinning beach ball is usually an indication that Search is going nuts.
    Turn off Search entire Library by clicking on the downward pointing arrow to the right of the Magnisying glass and untick Search entire library.
    Is your music still in iTunes on your new hard drive or is it only on your ipod?
    If it is in your itunes then you should be able to plug in the iPod and uncheck Manually Manage music and sync
    If the music is only on the ipod connect up as above click on the device and Drag all the music from your device to the library. then you can uncheck manually manage music and sync as normal

  • Do I have to re-do BootCamp after hard drive upgrade?

    I currently have an early-2011 MacBook Pro with 500GB storage. I ran BootCamp and now have a partitioned hd with 300GB on my OSX side and 200GB on my Windows side. I'm running out of space and want to upgrade my hd to a 1TB hd and was wondering if the ratio of storage space would be the same after the upgrade or if I would have to re-do BootCamp and re-install Windows. I have been backing up my computer on an external hd and would be able to go back to the way it was before I ran partitioned it, and since only games are on the Windows side (mostly through Steam), it wouldn't be too hard to start from scratch and re-install the games. So basically this is what I'm asking: after upgrading my hd from 500GB to 1TB, will I have to do BootCamp all over again or will I be able to choose how much space I put on each side of the partition?

    There is a surprising amount of misinformation about this topic. I don't know whether the people who make Winclone are to blame, but if you look right across the internet you'd be forgiven for coming to the conclusion that the only way to move, restore or resize your bootcamp petition is to use paid software. This is simply not true. If you're willing to spend some time and follow a couple more steps, it's easy to install a new hard drive, and put both your OSX and WIN7 partitions back precisely as they were (or resize as you please) without using anything other than freely available utilities.
    The way I've come up with uses a 160GB Maxtor USB drive and a DMG image of your bootcamp partition stored on a networked computer. I intended to write these up with screenshots at some point. But for now here are my unedited notes.
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    5 - Plug in the drive that you used to create a backup of the MAC OS and hold down option when turning on - boot from the external drive
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    9 - Shutdown. Turn on holding down option. Fire up the GParted disk you made early. It's an ugly interface, but gets the job done. Just accept the default settings when asked questions when starting up.
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    13 - On the refit menu, select the option to the right of the command prompt icon (the partition tool) - it will ask you if it can sync the Mac boot table with the Win boot table (something like adding the MBR to the boot schedule) - say yes. It takes less than a second.
    14 - Restart - and again hold option. Grab your original Windows installation CD and boot into it. Select your region and then go to "Repair your computer". Ignore the message about being able to fix and restart (choose No). Then choose Startup Repair. It'll do its thing. You can then restart.
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  • MBP mid-2009 Freezing after Hard Drive upgrade -HELP!

    So, my Apple Care just ended and I was almost always at a full 320GB, so I decided to upgrade my hard drive to 1TB.  I purchased a Western Digital TB drive (9.5mm) at a store recommended by an Apple Genius and followed the instruction on youtube exactly, as well as having another visit to the Genius bar, ensuring I grounded myself often throughout the process. My computer is a 15" MBP originally loaded with Snow Leopard, now running OSX Lion.  I did a Time Machine backup prior to everything and also bought an enclosure for my old hard disk to use and it has yet to be wiped, but Disk Utility says that it's corrupt because 1 program's debug log says the number of files changed (after the time machine processing.) I did a Carbon Copy Clone prior to installing the hard drive as well, so when all was done, I was able to start the computer without issue.  (This program is what told me first that I had an issue with that debug log.  I'd tried to delete a huge folder that was taking up nearly 30GB before the clone, it was backed up on time machine and another backup drive.)
    However, after Vuze re-opened (which I'd just recently upgraded to Pro) it froze the computer, so I got the rainbow disk and even Force Quit did not work.  Since then, I've had to reboot with the top right button dozens of times.  Mail, Chrome and Vuze have all caused freezing and Command Option Escape does not work at all.  My beloved computer is starting to feel like a big brick.  I uninstalled and re-installed Vuze Plus since, but still have the same issues (trashing the program then re-downloading).  As for Disk Utility, it says the drive is just fine.  There are no software updates needed and that's about as far as I can get before things crash again.
    I would really appreciate any assistance that can be provided based on this scenario.  I hope I've provided enough detail, please let me know if more is needed.
    Thank you in advance. 

    The only thing that I can think of is that your SATA cable may be bad... it's the first thing that I would try replacing. DIsk Utility wouldn't be able to detect a bad SATA cable - you'd just have random freezes and crashes.
    I don't know that this is the solution to your problem, but it's the first thing I would attempt. 2009 models are notorious for having bad SATA cables - try PowerbookMedic and order a new one. If it doesn't fix the problem, call back.
    Good luck,
    Clinton

  • How to run Boot Camp on External Hard Drive?

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    5) What version of Windows should I use?
    The program I will be using for my games is Steam.

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  • Slow Startup after Hard Drive Upgrade

    I upgraded my hard drive in my iMac. I used a Western Digital Caviar Black 2TB Internal Serial ATA Hard Drive from Best Buy.
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    As soon as I boot camped it, the Startup became very slow. If I hold down the Option key to get to the boot menu, it takes nearly a minute to get to the menu. Previously, it just took a few seconds. Once I choose the boot menu, the boot time is normal.
    So the slow down is just getting to the point were boot camp decides which OS to boot. (Sure I'm using the wrong jargon, but hopefully that's clear.) Before the upgrade, it booted so fast you could easily miss the holding down the option key. Now you have about 30-45 seconds to press the Option key and not miss the boot menu.
    I have run the disk utility with no errors to report. Once it boots, everything runs well, in either operating system. To reiterate, it booted at about the same speed before the upgrade until I boot camped it.
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    Thanks for reading all that.
    -Jack

    That did help... but, turns out the main culprit was a failing firewire external drive. As I was sitting here, checking out your solution, I had the machine off about to reboot when I heard and felt a vibration in the desk. Fearing my installation of the new hard drive, I looked over the Mac to see a very old WD MyBook vibrating on the desk. I unhooked it and booted and it came up at normal speed. So you indirectly solved my problem, thanks.
    -Jack

  • About boot camp with multiple hard drives.

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    Yes, Boot Camp can be used on any internal drive. To alter startup behavior use the Startup Disk preferences to set your OS X volume as the permanent boot volume. When you want to boot Windows use OPTION boot - restart and after chime press and hold down the OPTION key until the boot manager appears. Select the Windows volume then click on the large downward pointing arrow button. When you next restart the computer it will automatically return to OS X.

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