Install snow leopard on a partition of lion

I want to install snow leopard on a partition of Lion. Is that possible?

I have a question, when my macbook is loading the snow leopard partition, it just freezes, I can only see  grey apple without the signal that is loading the snow leopard "I mean the circle below the apple" and it take a long time but never start, I Have de 10.7.3 lion version and I started the snow leopard form other computer with the firewire cable and it works, what can I do please I need help!

Similar Messages

  • Installing snow leopard on a partition with lion as the native os

    I want to use quicken on my lion macbook pro. i tried installing snow leopard into a partition but can't install it. i can't start from the install disk and neither can i just designate the partition as the destination. thanks

    Joerel- You may not be able to boot that Mac with that DVD but it should be able to boot from a fully-updated version of Snow Leopard + Combo Update (preferably 10.6.8v2) since that model originally shipped with Snow Leopard. Getting Snow Leopard onto it might be an insurmountable challenge; it depends on your available resources.
    You're going to need a Mac that can boot from that DVD or already has 10.6.8v2 installed. You should then be able to clone that other Mac's boot volume over to the partition you set aside on your newer Mac's internal hard drive.
    Remember that you will need to use the Combo Updater, not the "delta" update from Software Update, if you want to be sure this will work. The reason for this is that you need to be sure the components for the newer Mac are included in the OS, which the original DVD install obviously does not have and the "delta" updates may not have.
    Get the combo updater here:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1399

  • How do I install Snow Leopard on a partition in Lion?

    I need my AppleWorks! This is what I've done thus far.
    I have a brand new 21.5" 2.5 GHz Core i5 running Lion. I made a 20 Gb partition on which I would like to install Snow Leopard so that I can run my beloved AppleWorks. I NEED the drawing program.
    I inserted a Snow Leopard install disk and restarted holding the C key. I get what looks like the Lion version of a Kernel Panic every time. It never goes to the SL disk.
    When I just open the SL disk under Lion and try to open the SL install app I get "You can't use this version of the application Install Mac OS X.app with this version of Mac OS X. You have Install (sic) Mac OS X.app 23.1."
    I've also tried booting while holding the option key to select the SL cd and I've changed the boot disk in SysPrefs to the SL disk, all with the same kernel panic result.
    Any suggestions welcome!

    The fact that you can't boot directly into the Snow Leopard disc without a kernel panic suggests that the SL disc you are using is not compatible with your hardware. Did your new machine come with Lion pre-installed and are you trying to use a SL disc that came from somewhere else?
    Even if this is the case, there still might be hope. This support page
    Mac OS X versions (builds) for computers
    contains the following entry for the newest iMacs:
    That indicates that your machine model was introduced before Lion was released, and originally shipped with Snow Leopard 10.6.6. Although it's possible that the hardware was changed for the machines that are now shipping with Lion, there is probably a reasonable chance that the hardware is the same, and that your machine can still run Snow Leopard. You would need the machine-specific OS X 10.6.6 Snow Leopard install disks that used to come with your particular model though - a retail Snow Leopard disc is OS X 10.6.3 and is too old for your machine, and an install  disc that shipped with a different model Mac won't work either. If this is your situation I would call Apple, give them your machine serial number, and see if there is a replacement set of Snow Leopard discs available for it.

  • I have created a new partition on the Mac HD for Lion as I would like to dual boot. Do I need to install Snow Leopard on that partition before installing Lion? If so, can I use one of my Time Machine backups to do this?

    I have created a new partition on the Mac HD for Lion as I would like to dual boot. Do I need to install Snow Leopard on that partition before installing Lion? If so, can I use one of my Time Machine backups to do this?

    zoominnana wrote:
    Can I set up 2 different time capsule backups? one for the lion partition and one for the snow leopard partition?
    No, you can't partition a Time Capsule's internal HD.  Both partitions will back up to the same sparse bundle. keeping the backups for each partition separate.
    Time Machine will not take the two OSX partitions as two different computers, but for best results, exclude the Snow Leopard drive from backups on the Lion partition, and exclude the Lion partition from backups on the Snow Leopard partition.
    There may be some files on the Lion partition that Time Machine on Snow Leopard won't like, among other things.  See #10 in  Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions for details.

  • Macbook pro with Maverics, can't install Snow Leopard on a partition.

    I have the latest Macbook Pro with Mavericks installed.  I have partitioned the internal hard drive and wish to install snow leopard on the partition from Disk.  It will not let me run the .app and gives me the following error. "You can't use this version of the application Install Mac OS X.app with this version of Mac OS X"

    Parallels
    VirtualBox
    VM Fusion
    Virtual Machine for 10.7/10.8
    Install OSX Restrictions

  • How do I install Snow Leopard as a partition with Yosemite on a 2001 Mac Mini?

    I have owned Mac's on and off since the 80's.  I currently own (myself and my kids) a 2008 MBP, iPhone 4 and 4s, 2 old iPhone 3's, just purchased a 2011 Mac Mini and iPhone 6, and my work-from-home computer is a 4 month old MBP.
    Several years ago, I upgraded the 2008 MBP to Mountain Lion.  Then the one and only game that I have played since around 2001, Star Wars Galactic Battlegrounds, wouldn't work on Mountain Lion so I successfully added a 50GB partition and reinstalled Snow Leopard and the game has worked great ever since.
    Recently, I gave my son that 2008 MBP, so I purchased the Mac Mini (i5 dual, 8GB memory, 750 HDD) and immediately upgraded it to Yosemite.  I proceeded to carve out a 50GB partition and have tried several times to install Snow Leopard to no avail. 
    After creating the 50GB partition, I rebooted, and held down the option key so I could then have the option install the Snow Leopard onto that 50GB partition - but it just keeps freezes up on me.  I even went so far as to try to copy the 50GB off the 2008 MBP onto the Mac Mini and that (understandably) didn't work either.
    While I know enough to cause trouble, I am completely flummoxed with this.  I've run many searches and haven't been able to find a solution.
    Can someone please walk me through the steps to make this work?  When I do restart, I don't even see that 50GB drive like I do when I restart the 2008 MBP so I suspect something may be wrong from the get go.  In Disk Utility, it shows the 2 partitions just fine, but not on reboot/restart with the option key held down.
    Thanks in advance for your help.

    Thanks very much for the quick reply.  I figured it would something that simple.  Like I said, I only know enough to cause trouble.  LOL
    Thanks again,  Guess I need to find a new game to play.  LOL

  • How to load snow leopard onto a partition of lion

    I wish to load Mac OS 10.6.3 onto a partition of my Mac OS 10.7 (Lion) in order to connect to various printrs...
    I have created set a partition and erased it completely as I possibly can but not enough since my attempts to
    load Snow Leopard have failed after many attempts. I understand that this should be possible, but how???

    If the Mac originally came with Lion, then you cannot install Snow Leopard. In just about 100% of all cases, you cannot install an OS that is older than what a Mac shipped with.
    If your Mac did come with Lion, then the only way you can run Snow Leopard is to purchases the Server version from Apple, and then run it within a virtual machine, such as VMWare or Parallels. Which wouldn't help you at all printing from apps outside the VM.

  • Install snow leopard on macbook air with lion?

    i´m trying to install snow leopard on my macbook air from a macbook with os x 10.7
    there is no remote install app anymore!
    Any ideas???

    What? If you have a MacBook with Lion how are you using it to install Snow Leopard (which you don't have) on a MacBook Air?
    Or is your subject correct and you have purchased a MacBook Air that came with Lion and you are trying to install Snow Leopard on it?

  • Installing Snow Leopard on New Partition

    Hi,
    I've read a lot about installing new partitions and running different opearting systems side by side and it seemed fairly straightforward.
    I have the lastest version of Monuntain Lion installed and created a partition for Snow Leopard to run some software that isn't so stable on Mountain Lion.
    Creating the partition was easy - but my iMac won't read my original SL install disc to install on the new partition.
    From what I've read this could either be due to DVD disc/player issues, or what is more likely (as I can successfuly run other discs) is that that having Mountain Lion intslled is stopping the process.
    I read that it may be the firmware version of my Imac stopping me installing the legacy OS.
    Can anybody shed any light on it?
    Regards
    Chris

    Last week we had something similar; two brand new iMacs, with software and plugins that don't run well on ML.
    After some googling we found finally a sort of solution, if you have the original SL disc, you cannot start the mac from it, because the only SL version the iMac will start off, is 10.6.8. The disc version is 10.6.3.
    You have to manually start the installation, so the mac will not reboot (because it will not start from the disc)
    This is from what I found;
    Pop in the Snow Leopard disk, or mount the imange, but instead of double-clicking the installer, click the Go menu and go to System/Installation/Packages  (note: there's no leading slash. You're not navigating to the System on the root drive, you're navigating to the System on the installer). Find OSInstall.mpkg and double-click. "mpkg" is a meta-package, or a package full of other packages. This is the installer that launches when you boot off the disk.
    Install on a clean partition, and use the Combo updater, then it should start from 10.6.8
    After some fiddling we now have two iMacs running Snow Leopard (which is still the best)

  • Install Snow Leopard on new partition (on new MacBook Pro)

    I need to install OS X 10.6 on my new MacBook (10.8.2) because older programs won't work on my new machines.
    I've successfully created a new partition. However when I hold down option button on startup I only see original partition and Recovery-10.8.2 but not the new partition. How on earth does one install an older version of OS X on a new machine. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

    1. It does. The newer Mac OS X versions contain the drivers for older supported machines. The older OSes don't contain the drivers for newer computers, as those didn't exist when the older OS came out.
    2. Restart the computer with the Option, Command, and R keys held down, open the installer, and specify the new partition as the destination.
    (111896)

  • Why am I not able to install snow leopard on a new hard drive for my macbook pro, which at one point was upgraded to Lion?

    I've just had my hard drive go caput and after purchasing a new one was inclined to install snow leopard but received an error message when attempting to do so.
    I did not create a back up or restore file before I decided to upgrade from snow leopard.
    I'm wondering why am I not able to simply install snow leopard on a brand new hard drive.  What would clue it into me having had ran lion before and why can't I simply delete that kernel or said file.    It makes completely no sense to me.  I come from a pc world where if I choose to format a hard drive, I can do a clean install of whatever OS I choose.  After all I only paid for my laptop as should be able to do with it what I wish. 
    Any suggestions or insight would be greatly appreciated

    1.  Was Lion on the machine and trying to downgrade?
    2.  If so this might be an issue.  Newer machines are done for current OSX.
    3.  If you have Lion on your machine try to install Snow Leopard on another partition or portable HD
    4.  After you format and install SL on the other partition or drive Try to boot from this machine retarting and holding the Option key at boot up.
    5.  See if that work. 
    This is a trial and error way but Mountain Lion is right around the corner and Snow Leopard is 2+ yrs old.
    Brian

  • Trying to re-install Snow Leopard over Lion and Macbook Pro is beeping like a memory failure

    I installed Lion on my work 15" MacBook Pro i7 to give it a go, and it's not working with the system we use for Active Directory login, so I need to roll back to Snow Leopard.
    I don't have a Time Machine backup, but I have pulled all the data I need from the machine, and have wiped the hard disk ready to reinstall Snow Leopard.
    I have a retail copy of Snow Leopard that I've recently used successfully for fresh installs on other machines, but now once I insert the DVD into this machine that's had Lion on it, it's not responding and just making alarming BEEP BEEP BEEP noises.
    I googled that and it might be bad RAM (possible, but unlikely? the machine has been running very well up until now)
    I've wiped the PRAM, but the instructions for wiping the SMC are a bit cryptic for these machines ...
    Does anyone have any clues as to what might be causing this? A firmware issue of some sort?
    Maybe the hidden EFI partition on the drive won't let you install Snow Leopard over a disk that's had Lion?

    Might be some useful info here:
    http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1175934
    " I used target disk mode to install Snow Leopard on its partition. I used a friends Macbook Pro, but I put my machine into target disk mode and ran the installer from his user account and optical drive. From a couple things I read online, it seems that Apple recommends putting the other machine in target disk mode and doing it the other way around. I guess some critical files might not have been installed? I also used a retail copy of Snow Leopard instead of my grey recovery disk, so that might be it too. "
    "Your machine is newer than the retail copy of Snow Leopard. Use the restore disks it came with.
    The installation will need to be done from your machine. You may need to do a net install, so look at "Remote Install Mac OS X" in Utilities."
    I'm currently installing from the macbook firewired to the other machine as recommended so hopefully that might help

  • How do you download snow leopard onto a mac with lion

    i just recently purchased a mac pro 13.3 inches and it came with lion, but lion doesnt run power pc apps so i went and bought snow leopard because i was addvised by and apple support member that i could install it onto a partition and choose to run it. days later i get the disk and call in but this oither member says i cant. can anyone here tell me how i can do this because i know you can but the apple guys just tell me that its not addvised and send me here. thank you

    Although you have accepted the negative answer as solving your problem, there is a positive one:
    Install Snow Leopard into Parallels 7 in Lion:
                             [click on image to enlarge]
    Full Snow Leopard installation instructions here:
    http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1365439

  • Snow Leopard on clean, partitioned HD?

    I am curious if I can install Snow Leopard on a clean, partitioned section of my hard drive, with no other Mac OS installed at all? I am PC user, Vista ultimate 64-bit, looking to dual-boot with Snow Leopard. I have done research on Google and I know it is possible, but I also came across a few links stating that SL can't be installed without the previous OS, Leopard.
    So, would it be possible for a PC user to install Snow Leopard on a partitioned section of my hard drive, with no previous Mac OS used?
    My specs meet the requirements of the OS, by the way...
    -Intel Core 2 Duo 2.66GHz
    -5GB DDR3 RAM
    -ATI Mobility HD Radeon 512MB
    -199GB free
    EDIT: Also, would I be required to use RebelEFI?
    Message was edited by: bLux-art

    bLux-art wrote:
    My specs meet the requirements of the OS, by the way…
    No, they do not. The primary spec is an Apple-branded Mac. This is not just a licensing requirement. Snow Leopard includes drivers only for the hardware Apple uses in Macs that can run Snow Leopard. Not only does Apple use proprietary versions of Intel CPU's, it uses only a limited number of graphics processors (not including the ATI Mobility series), & several custom circuits like the SMC. Macs also do not have a BIOS; they use EFI instead.
    Some people not concerned with legal niceties try to make do with hacks, including using Apple's drivers with near-equivalent PC hardware. Despite claims to the contrary, I have yet to see one of these things that is actually stable enough for any serious use.

  • Can't install snow leopard on partition after upgrading to lion

    I rushed out too early to install Lion via Apple Apps store.  Now, I realize that Rosetta is gone and so are my options to use older apps.  As I was reading on the web and Apple Support, I have tried various things and get a window saying that I can't install snow leopard.
    I have never partition my hard drive, but using disk utility I created a partition called "Snow Leopard."  It divided my HD in half which is okay.  I closed the disk utility window, rebooted holding down the "C" key, and saw the OS X Install DVD.  When I select it a window pops up saying, "You can't use this version of the appl inst Mac OS X with this version of Mac OS X.  You have installed Mac OS X 23.1.1."
    Before downloading lion, I made a backup of my existing HD using Time Machine to an external HD.  When I open up a saved version dated a month ago, I see that the applications that were working in snow leopard now have the icon circle saying that it is not supported by lion.  This is strange since I used Time Machine to back up my HD, then turned off the app before downloading lion.  Even older versions saved on the external HD show the circle.
    I read about lion and the "Recovery HD," but when I hold down the Command-R key nothing happens when I restart my computer.  It also talks about using the option key but that does not work.  It talks about reinstalling lion using this system, but I don't see it working.
    How can I install snow leopard on my new partition, then I would go to "Software Updates," to get the latest version, or use one of the versions on my external HD to have both operating system.
    Thanks,
    DaisyMay

    Hi Scottiemn,
    As I was trying different things to make a partition on my HD, I made notes as to what I did, and I finally got it to work.  I will try to explain what I did.
    Before installing “Lion,” I backed up Snow Leopard using Time Machine to my external Seagate HD.  I installed “Lion,” and found out that I could not use some of my old apps, so I did the following.
    Since I am running “Lion,” I opened up disk utility and selected my MacHD (1TB), then I selected partition, and it showed “Macintosh HD” under the partition information name.  I believe I selected the plus, + and it divided my HD space in half, and I named it Snow Leopard.
    I then installed the Snow Leopard DVD, and restarted my computer holding down the “C” key, I held it down for about 30 seconds or more and then took my finger off of the key.  As I waited I finally saw that I was on the install DVD, and on the top menu bar I saw “Utilities.”  I had my external Seagate HD mounted on my desk top before I restarted my computer, I selected the “Utilities,” on the menu bar and it gave me the option to back up from Time Machine, I selected my external Seagate HD to the newly created partition I named Snow Leopard and I said “Yes.”  I followed the instructions and after it was done, I went to the menu bar and selected System Preferences, System, Startup Disk, and selected to start up with Snow Leopard.  On my desktop, I can see two Hard Drives, one is Macintosh HD with “Lion,” and the other is Snow Leopard. 
    Then, I started up my computer and I was on the Snow Leopard partition and I saw all of my apps working.  I then went back to the menu bar and selected System Preferences, System, Startup Disk, and selected to start up with “Lion,” and restarted my computer and I was running “Lion.”
    I am not sure why I was not able to use the DVD of SL before, but somehow I got it to work, and I hope that I have explained what I did above.
    One thing, when I installed “Lion,” from the app store, I did not make a bootable DVD of the application.  I went back to the app store and downloaded “Lion” again and kept it in the dock until I got Snow Leopard to work.  I burned a DVD of “Lion,” and so I have a backup of it.
    Since my Seagate HD has only 250 GB of space and it is an EIDE HD 7,200 rpm using an OWC Mercury Elite FW400/USB2 with the Oxford chipset 911 enclosure which I bought in 2008, I decided that since I now have my 27 inch iMac quad core i5 with 1TB that I needed a larger hard drive.
    I researched the web and decided to go back to OWC and just bought a 2.0TB OWC Mercury Elite Pro “Quad Interface” 64MB with eSATA/FW800/FW400/USB2.0 with 7,200 rpm speed for $219.00.  I partitioned it for Time Machine, and Carbon Copy Cloner.
    I ran Time Machine, and both partitions “Lion, and Snow Leopard” are on the Time Machine partition and both HD’s are under the Carbon Copy Cloner.
    I am self taught on my many iMac’s over the years, and I go to the forums to ask questions and follow the helpful hints to resolve my problems.  I carefully try different things and write down what I did so I don’t repeat things.
    I hope that I have explained what I did, and hopefully it will work for you.
    When I want to run SL, I select in the System Preferences to start up from that disk, when I want to run Lion, I go back and select that and start up my computer running Lion.
    Since I have many old apps that Rosetta uses to open them up in SL I wanted to keep that operating system.  I will go back now that I have everything working and see if I really need them.  I won’t rush to remove my SL partition that I created, but in time if I don’t need the older apps then I may clean out my system and just run Lion.
    I run Lion now all of the time, but when I need to go back to SL, I now have the option.
    Good Luck,
    DaisyMay

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