How do I make a bootable disk for mavericks

Do I have to do it manually or is there an App which will do it for you?

Try here: It works, as I have just done it.
http://osxdaily.com/2013/06/12/make-boot-os-x-mavericks-usb-install-drive/

Similar Messages

  • How can I make a bootable disk for Mountain Lion?

    How can I make a bootable disk for Mountain Lion?

    Make Your Own Mountain/Lion Installer
    1. After downloading Mountain/Lion you must first save the Install Mac OS X Mountain/Lion application. After Mountain/Lion downloads DO NOT click on the Install button. Go to your Applications folder and make a copy of the Mountain/Lion installer. Move the copy into your Downloads folder. Now you can click on the Install button. You must do this because the installer deletes itself automatically when it finishes installing.
    2. Get a USB flash drive that is at least 8 GBs. Prep this flash drive as follows:
    Open Disk Utility in your Utilities folder.
    After DU loads select your flash 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.
    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.
    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.
    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.
    Click on the Erase button. The format process can take up to an hour depending upon the flash drive size.
    3. Locate the saved Mountain/Lion installer in your Downloads folder. CTRL- or RIGHT-click on the installer and select Show Package Contents from the contextual menu. Double-click on the Contents folder to open it. Double-click on the SharedSupport folder. In this folder you will see a disc image named InstallESD.dmg.
    4. Plug in your freshly prepared USB flash drive. You are going to clone the content of the InstallESD.dmg disc image to the flash drive as follows:
    Double-click on the InstallESD.dmg file to mount it on your Desktop.
    Open Disk Utility.
    Select the USB flash drive from the left side list.
    Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
    Select the USB flash drive volume from the left side list and drag it to the Destination entry field.
    Drag the mounted disc icon from the Desktop into the Source entry field.
    Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
    When the clone is completed you have a fully bootable installer that you can use without having to re-download Mountain/Lion.
    Note: The term Mountain/Lion used above means Lion or Mountain Lion.

  • How do I make a recovery disk for my Mac running 10.5.8?

    How do I make a recovery disk for my Mac running 10.5.8?

    Hi, if tryly a PowerMac, (PPC instead of Intel), you may need a Firewire Drive to be bootable, most PPC Macs cannot boot OSX from a USB drive.
    So we know more about it...
    At the Apple Icon at top left>About this Mac, then click on More Info, then click on Hardware> and report this upto but not including the Serial#...
    Hardware Overview:
    Model Name: iMac
    Model Identifier: iMac7,1
    Processor Name: Intel Core 2 Duo
    Processor Speed: 2.4 GHz
    Number Of Processors: 1
    Total Number Of Cores: 2
    L2 Cache: 4 MB
    Memory: 6 GB
    Bus Speed: 800 MHz
    Boot ROM Version: IM71.007A.B03
    SMC Version (system): 1.21f4

  • How can I make a recovery disk for an imac 24 "  early 2008 to April 2009 or connect via thunderbolt to another imac

    How can I make a recovery disk for an imac 24 "  early 2008 to April 2009 or connect via thunderbolt to another imacimac 24 "   or connect via thunderbolt to another imac
    ann

    You will only know about the hard drive when you try to access it in TDM from your other computer. If you cannot boot into TDM mode or if the drive does not appear on the new computer's Desktop then it is likely bad.
    What you are thinking about as a recovery disk is the Recovery HD normally created when you install Lion or later on the computer. You boot from it as follows:
    Boot Using Command+R keys:
      1. Restart the computer.
      2. Immediately after the chime press and hold down the
          "COMMAND" and the "R" keys together.
      3. Release the keys when the Utilities Menu appears.

  • How do I make a boot disk for my new iMac?

    How do I make a boot disk for my new iMac?

    Make Your Own Mavericks, Mountain/Lion Installer
    After downloading the installer you must first save the Install Mac OS X application. After the installer downloads DO NOT click on the Install button. Go to your Applications folder and make a copy of the installer. Move the copy into your Downloads folder. Now you can click on the Install button. You must do this because the installer deletes itself automatically when it finishes installing.
       2. Get a USB flash drive that is at least 8 GBs. Prep this flash drive as follows:
    Open Disk Utility in your Utilities folder.
    After DU loads select your flash drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the leftside list. 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.
    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.
    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.
    Click on the Erase button. The format process can take up to an hour depending upon the flash drive size.
    Use DiskMaker X to put your installer clone onto the USB flash drive.
    Make your own Mavericks flash drive installer using the Mavericks tool:
    You can also create a Mavericks flash drive installer via the Terminal. Mavericks has its own built-in installer maker you use via the Terminal:
    You will need a freshly partitioned and formatted USB flash drive with at least 8GBs. Leave the name of the flash drive at the system default, "Untitled." Do not change this name. Open the Terminal in the Utilities folder. Copy this entire command line after the prompt in the Terminal's window:
         sudo /Applications/Install\ OS\ X\ Mavericks.app/Contents/Resources/createinstallmedia --volume
         /Volumes/Untitled --applicationpath /Applications/Install\ OS\ X\ Mavericks.app --nointeraction
    Press RETURN. Enter your admin password when prompted. It will not be echoed to the screen so be careful to enter it correctly. Press RETURN, again. Wait for the process to complete which will take quite some time.

  • HT201364 how do i make more space available for mavericks update?

    how do i make more space avaialble for mavericks update

    One place to check is the hidden Library folder under your user account. From the Finder Menu click Go > Go To Folder > Enter: ~/Library/
    IF YOU ARE UNSURE DO NOT DELETE SOMETHING
    You may be able to find refrences to old applications that you have uninstalled. There is another folder inside that one called Application Support (~/Library/Application Support/). Same idea goes here, old software folders can be safely blown away. Don't forget to empty the Trash!
    Bonus Points?
    You can use the same technique on the /Library folder aswell!
    Happy Deleting!

  • How can I make an install disk for iTunes?

    I need to update iTunes but I cannot get the download to complete. The connection has been confirmed as stable so it doesn't appear to be a system issue. If I make an install disk for the current version of iTunes on another PC, I should be able to install it. The download doesn't give options to save to a disk. How should I go about this?

    The download doesn't give options to save to a disk
    Go to the following webpage and click the "Download" button, and then click the "Save" button:
    http://www.apple.com/itunes/download/
    ... once the iTunesSetup.exe (installer) file has downloaded, then copy the iTunesSetup.exe file across to your CD (or even a large-enough thumb drive or something similar). Copy the iTunesSetup to your PC from the CD or thumb, and start the install by doubleclicking on the file.

  • How can I make a bootable disk with some third party applications to use?

    My Macbook's performance has slowed WAY down and I want to try running a couple of different tools on it to optimize it.
    Thing is, some if not all of them require you to boot from a different disk, and since I got them online, I don't have bootable CDs for them.
    The OS X install disk doesn't allow you to access files on your HD and neither does DiskWarrior's DVD, so is there any way at all to make a bootable CD which will show me a finder window with the tools I need or anything like that?
    I KNOW that BootCD exists for older versions of mac, and frustratingly that's the only answer I have come across online despite the fact that it doesn't work for Tiger.
    Please help, any advice would be greatly appreciated.

    Argh, posted this in the wrong section, AND I figured out how to do it myself anyway...
    Could a mod please close this? Apologies to everyone for making a balls of this

  • How can I make a bootable disk so as to repair my drive?

    Hello,
    I am away from home and not carrying my Tiger install DVD. I had three crashes after installing Safari Beta 2 days ago and now disk utility reports failure on exit when verifying my Macbook drive. To repair this I need to boot from some other medium and run Disk Utility from there. Is it possible for me to make a bootable DVD? Or a bootable USB memory stick(the one I am carrying is 1 gig in size)? Or can I download something to make it possible? thanks a lot, LJ
    PS this has happened me 3 times in a year since moving to mac and it peeves me greatly that such a great OS cannot solve its own directory structure problems - the way Scandisk does for windows.

    thanks for the suggestion. I have tried fsck before but for me it has never solved the problem - afterwards, verify disk in Disk Utility still reports failure on exit. Seems I get myself into the biggest possible diffs! Fsck is supposed to do even more than disk utility but I have not found it so. In my previous diffs, when I boot from another medium and run "repair disk," it (nearly!) always solves the problem. If anyone else can give me an answer I would be most grateful LJ

  • How do you make a startup disk for Mac Pro with mountain lion

    My Mac Pro did not come with a disk how do you make one or get one??
    If you ever need to repair or reformat your hard drive you need one!

    If you still have - or can download - the Lion Installer app from the Mac App Store, you'll find an app titled "Install Mac OS Mountain Lion.app" in your Applications folder. If it's not there, and you've already purchased it, just go to the MAS, look under your Purchases tab and download it from there. If you haven't already purchased it, you'll need to do so using your Apple ID.
    Once you have the installation app, get a 8GB+ USB flash drive and download DiskMaker X - just plug in the flash drive, start up DiskMaker X and follow the instructions. You'll now have a bootable installation disk.
    Good luck,
    Clinton

  • How to get make a boot disk for lion

    Hi,
    I have a fatal disk error that required a full rebuild (so says disk utility) but how to obtain as there was no option to create at upgrade time and I can not see any other method. SO how do you do it?

    Macs with pre-installed OS X Lion don't come with physical media. You have a recovery partition on your internal hard disk on your mac. If you want to reinstall OS X, hold down CMD + R when you hear the startup sound.
    If you want to, you can buy an OS X Lion USB Thumb drive here: http://store.apple.com/us/product/MD256Z/A  ($69.00)
    You can also copy the recovery hd on an USB drive with this tool: http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1433

  • How do I make a bootable hard drive clone of my main disk in my mac pro?

    Hi everyone,
    How do I make a bootable hard drive clone of my main disk in my mac pro?
    My main drive has bad sectors and I want to replace it.
    Thanks in advance

    Also your  Mac's Disk Utility can make a bootable clone;
    http://macs.about.com/od/backupsarchives/ss/diskbackup.htm
    Consider though, if your internal HD is failing and defective, then any clone however made, may carry that defect.
    Perhaps it would be better to copy your personal data, photos emails etc, to an external drive as well, just in case the clone did not work because of the failing hard drive.

  • How to make a boot disk for new iMac?

    I just purchased a new iMac equipped with a bare bones 1TB SATA hard drive.  I want to replace that disk with a 1TB SSD from Crucial (less than 1/2 of the cost of purchasing the iMac with the SSD).  I have a Time machine backup of the iMac on a Time Machine/Airport device; how do I make a boot disk that can get the OS up and running, and able to restore the backup from the Time Machine?
    Thanks,
    Tony Darst
    Baton Rouge, LA

    tdarst wrote:
    I had not given the warranty issue any prior thought; thanks for pointing that out.  Is there a way around the warranty issue; such as a "factory authorized" way to install it, that is feasible?
    Thanks for the quick response...
    TD
    You can take it an AASP to have the install done however you probably would be better off returning the machine (assuming it was bought directly from Apple and is less than 14 days old) and buy the configuration you want. Even if an AASP does install the SSD there is no guarantee Apple will honor the warranty, it's 100% at their discretion.

  • How do I make a bootable cd from the windows .iso file

    I am trying to install windows xp on my iMac. My univeristy gives me free copy of XP but I have to download the .iso file. I tried burning the .iso file to a cd but bootcamp says it can not recognize the cd for installation. How can a make a bootable copy of the windows xp .iso file so that I can install it on my iMac.

    You used Disk Utility I take it?
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO-9660
    http://www.ezbsystems.com/ultraiso/
    This is for creating a custom Vista SP1 EFI-enabled DVD:
    http://www.jowie.com/post/2008/02/Select-CD-ROM-Boot-Type--prompt-while-trying-t o-boot-from-Vista-x64-DVD-burnt-from-iso-file.aspx

  • How do I make a boot CD for Lion?

    I just bought my kids MacBook Pros with Lion pre-installed.  It came with no resotre disk- what if they crash?  How do I make a bootable 'recovery disk' without having to buy another copy of Lion from the App store?
    I found this link on Google-
    http://www.ehow.com/video_4978308_create-mac-startup-disk.html
    but soemthing doesn't make sense about this method- wouldn't the diosk image you were trying to burn end being way bigger than a DVD?

    Macs with pre-installed OS X Lion don't come with physical media. You have a recovery partition on your internal hard disk on your mac. If you want to reinstall OS X, hold down CMD + R when you hear the startup sound.
    If you want to, you can buy an OS X Lion USB Thumb drive here: http://store.apple.com/us/product/MD256Z/A  ($69.00)
    You can also copy the recovery hd on an USB drive with this tool: http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1433

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