How to boot from an external LaCie hd?

dear all,
I've got this firewire hd:
http://www.lacie.com/it/support/support_manifest.htm?id=10289
and connected to my father's 400 MhZ Sawtooth to be used as startup disk.
I've cloned the current boot hd with Carbon Copy Cloner, selected the external as startup, restarted... and nothing happened: the Power Mac still boots from the internal hd. Just to be safe I formatted again the LaCie disk and I've installed 10.4 from the install dvd, again selected the external as startup disk from the Preferences... and just as before the Sawtooth booted from the internal. What could be wrong? The firmware on this Mac is 3.1.3f1... maybe an update is needed? If yes, where it's found on Apple website? Or what else? Apart from this the LaCie hd seems to be working as fine as possible.
Thanks & New Year wishes, Stefano

Your Mac requires a firmware (Boot ROM version in System Profiler) update to 4.2.8 See Mac OS X: Available firmware updates
http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=86117 The update should be installed (using OS 9) BEFORE you install OS X.
If you depress the Option key at startup, which activates the Startup Manager, does the external drive show up?
 Cheers, Tom

Similar Messages

  • How to Boot From an External HD

    I am still pondering getting a mini - I know that I will want a much larger hard drive (since I want to use it for media and will keep tons of video and music on it). I would like to know how to boot from an external hard drive. I've searched google, the forums, and apple support, and see people mention it all the time, but can't find out how to do it, etc. Is it just like running off my normal HD but all the files are kept on the external (so I could still access files thru itunes, etc.)?
    Also, I would like to get a 500GB+ drive to keep my files on, and was wondering if people had recomendations. Brands, USB 2.0 or Firewire, etc.
    Apologies if this is a novice question - but I can't seem to find answers anywhere.
    Thanks in advance.

    Firstly, it is certainly possible to boot from an external drive, so what you plan is not only feasible, but since the external would be faster than the internal drive, also rather beneficial to the efficient running of the mini - meaning, the system will be notably faster in use.
    In my view, the best option is an external firewire drive, not USB. The reason is that FW has it's own dedicated controller while USB doesn't. In effect, it means that FW data transfer speeds are stable and consistent, while USB rates vary widely, depending on what else the system is doing.
    Once you have your external drive connected, the easiest way to make it bootable is to copy your existing MacOS install from the internal drive using software such as Carbon Copy Cloner (downloadable from www.versiontracker.com). This will avoid having to do a lengthy reinstall. Once MacOS is copied, then open System Preferences, and the Startup Disk preference pane, and click on the external drive icon. The next restart will then be directed to the external.
    Once you have booted from the external drive, you use it just as you would an internal, and MacOS will treat it as the boot volume, including by default, placing your user account folders on it, including your documents, music etc.

  • Help please: how to boot from clone/external hard drive because "disk cannot be partitioned because some files cannot be moved"?

    MBP Retina 15" MID 2014 2.5Ghz
    OS X Yosemite 10.10
    I have a external HDD and want to erase and restore my laptop so I can install windows via Bootcamp Assistant but I don't know how to boot from a clone to fix the issue and am not sure if when I erase and restore I will still have Yosemite 10.10? I have no way to reinstall the OS if I lose it. An average user friendly guide would be greatly appreciated please

    I do not think you have to erase your MacBook's disk in order to install Windows. First of all you can try a few things before formatting the disk.
    The first thing you should do is to check that your MacBook Pro's drive is OK with Disk Utility (in /Applications/Utilities). After opening it, choose "Macintosh HD" in the sidebar and press "Verify Disk". If it gives you any error, you will have to boot your Mac in OS X Recovery (press Command and R keys while your Mac is starting up) to repair Macintosh HD (the steps are the same but pressing "Repair Disk" instead of "Verify Disk").
    After you have repaired the drive, boot up in OS X and try partitioning the drive again with Boot Camp Assistant. If it does not work, you will have to format the drive and reinstall OS X, but I will give you these steps only if this does not work.

  • How to boot from an external dvd/cd because your superdrive is broken

    This is in response to a previous archived thread that was never fully answered, found here:
    https://discussions.apple.com/message/12410086#12410086
    Advice given on previous thread that did not work for me:
    You have to hold the ALT key in order to boot from the external drive.
    ~Lyssa
    This advice is correct, except here are the full directions:
    1. Press power and startup macbook OR click on apple icon in upper right corner and click restart.
    2. As computer starts/restarts, hold down the option (ALT) key until you see a choice of options to boot from. There will not be an option for external cd/dvd, until the computer has finished reading that drive.
    3. Wait as much as a 30 seconds to 5 minutes as macbook recognizes the bootable disk in the external cd/dvd drive. As long as the drive is making noise/reading disk, wait it out. The new selection will appear on its own.
    4. Select dvd to boot from, then click the arrow below. It will begin to boot from that drive and install/reinstall your OSX.
    5. Follow the prompts to install OSX
    Notes: I was using a macbook 4,1 and external dvd burner with separate power supply, and Mac OSX Install disc that came with my macbook (OSX 10.5.4)

    Your Mac requires a firmware (Boot ROM version in System Profiler) update to 4.2.8 See Mac OS X: Available firmware updates
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=86117 The update should be installed (using OS 9) BEFORE you install OS X.
    If you depress the Option key at startup, which activates the Startup Manager, does the external drive show up?
     Cheers, Tom

  • How to boot from cloned external HD

    I have just cloned my HD using Carbon Copy Cloner.
    I can not figure out how to boot from this cloned drive.
    I am sure it must be something easy like holding a key down while restarting.
    Thanks,
    Brian

    you can also use the start up pane found within system preferences.

  • Booting from an external drive 10.3.2 with new i7 mac mini

    How to boot from an external drive with 10.3.2 using a new i7 mac mini. Seems to be a build problem?

    Your Mac is incapable of running 10.3.2. The version of OS X 10.3 is PowerPC only and your Mac has an Intel processor.
    Why do you want to do that?
    Allan

  • How can i install snow leopard on my mac G5 using a command line and booting from an external usb rom, since my disk i have is not a bootable media

    How can i install snow leopard on my mac G5 using a command line and booting from an external usb rom, since my disk i have is not a bootable media

    Hi.
    You simply can't. Snow Leopard is compiled in Intel binary only.
    Good Luck.

  • How can I boot from an external drive?

    I am unsuccessful trying to have the external backup drive to boot the Powerbook. I tried first a USB Lacie Mobile Disk, then thinking USB was the problem I got a FireWire Little Disk of the same brand. None will boot even if the disk appears in the startup disk control panel. When I boot with option key, the choice is no longer there. Maybe they require a power supply other than the USB power lead? Any experience?

    USB drives are not bootable for PowerBooks. FireWire drive usually needs to be used with the power supply since it consumes more power than the USB
    Right! So there is no way to boot from an external without a power source.
    Thanks Arnie.

  • How do I boot from an external drive?

    I've just Carbon Cloned my 60GB drive to a firewire external drive. I'm about to replace the 60GB with a 160GB drive and the CCC instructions say boot from the external drive I'd just created once the new disk is installed. Then CCC the cloned drive back to the new hard drive.
    So, how do I boot from an external drive? Do I have load anything to the new drive? Will the macbook detect the external drive and boot from that? Or what??????
    Thanks
    Dick

    Thanks DWB. Being the rash impetuous guy I am I didn't wait for replies and just switched on the macbook after installing the new disk (which was so easy it was unbelievable - had to go and buy a a little torx bit though) to see what would happen.
    Blow me down with a feather if it didn't just boot off the external drive all by itself :-O It did come up with the disk was unverified and I could see it in FINDER and I was prseented with a screen to ERASE/RESTORE etc.
    When I went to CCC the external drive back to the new hard drive it didn't give show me the new hard drive so I guessed I'd have to do something to format (?) the hard drive.
    I don't know if I did the right thing but I went to disk utilities and chose ERASE in the vague hope it would maybe format the disk in some way.
    Seems to work now and the CCC replaced the system perfectly as far as I can see.
    Basically very impressive all round. Piece of proverbial to replace the disk and CCC made life so easy.
    Thanks again.
    Cheers
    Dick

  • How to boot from external Hardisk where sap is installed

    Hi friends,
    I have an External Hardisk where SAP is installed in it i.e., Win 2003 on C drive & SAP on D drive.
    In my laptop Win XP is there, but I am trying to boot with External Hardisk where Win 2003 is installed.
    I am selecting to boot from External Hardisk where Win 2003 is installed but it shows the Win 2003 booting screen and the next moment screen becomes black.
    So can anyone help me How to boot from Hardisk.
    Thanks
    santhosh

    Hi,
      You can not boot OS from USB devices in Windows.
    Create the separate drive on your existing disc and install windows on that drive and use ur USB disc for installing SAP.
    Hope it'll help u....

  • How Do I Always Boot From An External Drive

    I successfully installed Mac OS X 10.4.8 on an external hard drive. It boots successfully into OS X, but only if you press option on boot and select the drive or if you boot from the drive inside my Mac Mini and go to startup disk and select the external. Is there any way to just always boot from the external drive without doing anything? Thanks in advance for all of your help.
    Mac Mini PowerPC Mac OS X (10.4.8)

    If booting from a cold start doesn't work but restarting after selecting the drive does work, then most likely the drive isn't ready when the Mac is doing the cold boot.
    Try turning the drive on several seconds before turning on the Mac.

  • Will the late 2013 Mac Pro boot from an external drive (4Tb, USB 3) with a cloned Win7 x64 partition on it?

    Hello all,
    I ordered a CTO Mac Pro for heavy rendering and animating work, and I am planning on using bootcamp to install a windows partition (for 3DsMax). As I am now using a HP Elitebook 8770W that has several valuable files and projects on it, I have bought a Seagate 4Tb external Desktop Drive that uses USB 3.0 to use as a backup drive. Now, as I saw that Bootcamp Assistant only supports installing a x64 version of Windows 8, my question is:
    Will a late 2013 Mac Pro using bootcamp assistant boot from an external USB drive with a cloned partition running x64 win7? Or do I really have to buy Windows 8 and install that to my internal SSD, and then use the migration assistant to copy over my projects?
    Thanks!

    Posted? or found in new builds?
    BCA should really just pull whatever the latest drivers are when run. 
    If it is with how it partitions and sets up nMP and its partition for Windows that is another matter and makes sense.
    Some people want UEFI native booting in Windows, and my experieince with that on PCs has been that it boots faster and runs well, but has different partitions that it wants. For one thing, there is now a backup "system reserved" partition, just as Apple GUID has some volume information blocks and backup and areas that were once optional (and if format erase was not able to, it would not create one) are now mandatory.
    Windows 8.1 is req'd, reason a backup should be a big must - is it might overwrite and use another OS's  partition table entries.  Especially when doing UEFI install.
    There was something about which linux OS was safe and how they would each add entries in the table, but one would not place nice.  That one had to be done first or not at all.

  • I'm booting from a new LaCie Thunderbolt SSD and it won't wake from sleep.

    As my boot drive I have a new 1TB LaCie Thunderbolt SSD Disk. It's connected to a 27" 2.7 GHz Intel i5 iMac (mid 2011). I'm running OS X 10.8.2. Nothing else is connected on Thunderbolt.
    Everything runs fine and very fast, with the one exception of not waking from sleep.
    When I try to wake it up, the screen illuminates and the desktop is not completely frozen: I can drag windows around, but I can't open applications or do anything with the Finder. I get a spinning beachball if I move the cursor over the menu bar at the top. The only option is to restart.
    I've contacted LaCie and they say their devices are "storage devices" and not "system drives". Yet I've been running my system from a 1TB LaCie D2 for at least a couple of years. I pointed out to LaCie support that nowhere on the box does it say their devices are for storage only.
    Any suggestions?

    @Kappy - not the most useful of replies mate to be honest.After all, there is a strong possibility that this has everything to do with the way OS X and the thunderbolt interface handle wake from sleep states.
    @kbrine:
    I am having exactly the same problem but with slightly different hardware:
    iMac 27 (mid-2011) with Mountain Lion 10.8.2
    Booting from a Crucial M4 SSD in an OWC SATA enclosure connected to a Lacie eSata thunderbolt hub (which is connected to the iMac).
    In normal use the drive is super fast and works really well.
    But my problem is exactly as you describe, put the machine into sleep, and on wake everything appears to come back ok however you can't open apps from the dock and the spinning beachball appears. You can't do anything else and you have to reboot.
    Now the interesting thing is that if I put the machine to sleep and then wake it up again within 1 minute everything works perfectly. After a longer period of time - and I'm presuming when the energy saving profile moves to a deeper sleep state (I don't know for sure so speculation from me here) - I get the problem we are having and I have to reboot.
    Here's what I've tried so far:
    Updated my SSD to the latest firmware.
    No firmware updates available for the OWC enclosure nor the Lacie eSata hub (at least, not that I could find)
    Turned off bluetooth (others on this forum had a problem with BT interfering with Thunderbolt displays coming back on after sleep)
    Turned off 'Automatic Brightness Adjust' (again, based on Thunderbolt Display problems that others have reported)
    I've tried out AutoEJECT and Jettison apps that unmount all external drives and re-mount them when waking from sleep. They've made absolutely no difference. Save yourself a few $$ and don't bother buying them from the App Store.
    I've tried unplugging and re-inserting the Thunderbolt cable connecting my eSata hub to the iMac. No effect.
    And that's as far as I've got. There are only two things left for me to try:: disable 'Power Nap' which - apparently - can also cause problems with Thunderbolt devices during sleep. But I'm not confident with that being the solution. Turn the power off to the Crucial M4 when the problem occurs and then re-power it in the hope that it causes some sort of refresh of the connection to happen. Again, not sure that's a good solution either as I don't want to be powering down my SSD every time I bring the iMac out of sleep!!!
    So I too am open to ideas and opinions on what might be causing these wake-from-sleep problems arising when Mac OS is booted from an external thunderbolt drive.

  • Booting from an external drive over usb

    Hey, has anyone else had any problems booting from an external? I have an external lacie drive that I keep a clone backup on (using superduper) and usually have it connected with firewire400. I know it works because i've accidently booted using it before, but recently the firewire port on it died so i've been using usb instead.
    Now the problem, holding option on my macbook starting, I get no options to choose from. If i have the mac osx dvd in, it pops up so I know it's not a problem with my macbook. It is possible to boot from usb correct? Everything i've read has said it's possible... I'm not sure why my external drive isn't coming up. I know it works over usb because I've used it alot since the firewire port died on it. I checked in the disk utility and it does say it's bootable, and afterall it's cloned using superduper like i said before...
    I have 2 partitions on the drive, is that a problem? It never was before, I've booted off it many times before using firewire though. Can someone help me out here? Very annoying as I'm replacing the HD in my macbook and neeeeeeed to get on my external.
    When I asked the guy at the genius bar awhile ago he just said it was probably a problem because my old internal HD died and he said sometimes it causes the macbook to not even be able to get as far as the point to boot from another source. Well now I have a new working drive in it, so I know that's not the problem. It just doesn't show up to boot from anymore, ugh.

    Sounds like your clone isn't bootable. Have you tried the following:
    Repairing the Hard Drive and Permissions
    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 Installer menu (Utilities menu for Tiger and Leopard.) After DU loads select your hard drive entry (mfgr.'s ID and drive size) from the the left side list. In the DU status area you will see an entry for the S.M.A.R.T. status of the hard drive. If it does not say "Verified" then the hard drive is failing or failed. (SMART status is not reported on external Firewire or USB drives.) If the drive is "Verified" then select your OS X volume from the list on the left (sub-entry below the drive entry,) click on the First Aid tab, then click on the Repair Disk button. If DU reports any errors that have been fixed, then re-run Repair Disk until no errors are reported. If no errors are reported click on the Repair Permissions button. Wait until the operation completes, then quit DU and return to the installer. Now restart normally.
    If DU reports errors it cannot fix, then you will need Disk Warrior (4.0 for Tiger, and 4.1 for Leopard) and/or TechTool Pro (4.6.1 for Leopard) to repair the drive. If you don't have either of them or if neither of them can fix the drive, then you will need to reformat the drive and reinstall OS X.

  • Portege 244OCT - Is it possible to boot from a external CD-ROOM

    Hi,
    I've just got an old Toshiba Portege 344OCT laptop with an HD of 6 GB and with an intel Pentium III processor 500 MHz and 128 MB RAM. At the moment i have it under Windows XP Home Edition. I would like to revert it to Windows 98SE but the computer does not have an floppy drive or an internal cdrom. It does have an usb port, though. I am trying to boot the windows 98 cd from an external usb cdrom drive (EZ-DUB) but it doesn't work. I don't seem to find an option to boot it from an USB device either. My bios is from 27 June 2001.
    Is there something that I can do in order to manage to boot my computer from my EZ-BUB? and how could I update my bios to the v1.6 without the floppy drive?
    Thanks,
    grdoming

    Hello
    Im not sure but I think an external FDD should work but I doubt that the external CD drive will work.
    What you can do? In your case I would copy the win98 folder on the HDD. Therefore remove the HDD and connect it to an other notebook or PC as external HDD. Format it with FAT32 and copy the win98 folder from the CD on it.
    Put the HDD back in the notebook and start the installation if you boot from an external FDD and a Windows 98 boot disk.
    Greets

Maybe you are looking for