Install Windows 7 on Bootcamp 5.1 iMac Late 2009 27''

HI,
I have a late 2009 iMac 27 inch and try to install Windows 7 with bootcamp:
- iMac (27-inch, Late 2009)
- OSX 10.10.2
- Bootcamp 5.1.3
- Windows 7 Enterprise (on DVD)
- USB 2.0 Harddisc
- External SuperDrive for the Windows Install DVD
What happens is, that the Screen turns black after the partitioning of the internal drive by BootCamp. The Windows Installation does not start at all. Then the iMac reboots and gets stuck with just showing the Apple logo.
I can then reset it with the on/off buttoned with the option key can select the OS X partition, which makes it boot in OS X. The bootcamp partition shows no files on it. When I start bootcamp again, I can only remove th bootcamp partition.
Any clues? This is not the missing driver issue (as that shows a blinking cursor AFTER installation of Windows.
Best regards
Hollebole

- External SuperDrive for the Windows Install DVD
According to iMac (27-inch, Late 2009) - Technical Specifications, there is a built-in Optical drive on your Mac.
Optical drive
Slot-loading 8x SuperDrive (DVD±R DL/DVD±RW/CD-RW)
Writes DVD+R DL and DVD-R DL discs at up to 4x speed
Writes DVD-R and DVD+R discs at up to 8x speed
Writes DVD-RW discs at up to 6x speed and DVD+RW discs at up to 8x speed
Reads DVDs at up to 8x speed
Writes CD-R discs at up to 24x speed
Writes CD-RW discs at up to 16x speed
Reads CDs at up to 24x speed
Is there a reason not to use the built-in Optical drive? For most Macs with built-in Optical drive, BCA sets the booting to be from the internal Optical drive, not from the external Optical drive.

Similar Messages

  • Installing Windows on Bootcamp on new iMacs (late 2012)

    I absolutely love the new iMacs. They seem a good bit faster than my current 2009 model and make a nice upgrade for our home I am wondering about a few things, and hopefully someone here can help me get some answers on it.
    With the old iMacs I have never been able to install Windows on Bootcamp via a USB stick/HD. Since the Superdrive is removed with the new iMacs, I'm hoping that that function is finally activated… currently that function is only activated (in the EFI from what I learned) on the MacBook Pro's and Air's. I have tried to install Windows 7 from various USB sticks and HD's on several different iMacs. Some USB sticks and HD's do properly install Windows when I try the same thing via a MacBook, so the sticks and HD's are not the issue
    Does anyone have some insight in this? I don't really feel like buying the Apple USB Superdrive, which officially is not even supported on iMacs, júst to install Windows for my occassional PC game. So basically, does anyone know wether or not it's possible to install Windows on Bootcamp via a USB stick or HD on the newly released iMacs?

    I would think so
    but rather then trying to have it verified in the imac forum I would ask in the bootcamp forum if I were you
    https://discussions.apple.com/community/windows_software/boot_camp

  • How do i install windows 8.1 onto my iMac late 2013

    how do install windows 8.1 onto my late 2013 imac. i have no prior windows uploaded onto my imac and i would like to download windows 8.1 without having all these problems that everyone else is seeming to have.

    Boot Camp http://www.apple.com/support/bootcamp/
    Not sure what you mean when you say "all these problems", what else do you expect?.......after all it IS windows!

  • Anyone successfully installed Windows 7 x64 Enterprise on iMac running OSX 10.9.3?

    I am trying to install Windows 7 x64 Enterprise onto IMac (late 2013 model) that has Maverick OSX 10.9.3 installed.  We have done this in the past, before upgrading to 2012R2, and using 10.9.2 OSX. 
    When I create the TS media using x64 WinPE, insert into the IMac and boot - the boot selection pulls up.  I select the USB EFI boot (only one that loads and it starts running WinPE and pulling up the Task sequence selection.  I think the issue
    is with the partition table.  Before installing Windows - I exit with F8, run diskpart, which shows 3 primary partitions.  I add a 4th and format as NTFS.  I now have 4 primary partitions - none that show as EFI.  The TS starts, checks
    requirements, and tried to download the preinstallation environment to the disk as the TS tells it to install to disk 0, part 4 with no formatting and fails with 0x8007000f. 
    If I use diskpart to clean the drive and boot with the USB  to EFI, let SCCM select Bios or UEFI, it will detect to UEFI, download the PE environment and apply the OS.  When it reboots, it does not recognize the hd, showing a flashing folder. 
    Any help or comments are appreciated. 
    Thanks
    Zander.wheels

    Hi,
    I recommend you use Boot Camp to create partition.
    Boot Camp is a multi boot utility included with Apple Inc.'s OS X that assists users in installing Microsoft Windows operating systems on Intel-based Macintosh computers.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boot_Camp_(software)
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3986
    Note: Microsoft provides third-party contact information to help you find technical support. This contact information may change without notice. Microsoft does not guarantee the accuracy of this third-party contact information.
    We
    are trying to better understand customer views on social support experience, so your participation in this
    interview project would be greatly appreciated if you have time.
    Thanks for helping make community forums a great place.

  • How to install windows 7 on Imac late 2009 using Vmware/Vbox

    Hey guys. Here's the thing. I've installed Windows 8 on my imac late 2009 but then i realized that there's no bootcamp drivers for it (check image).
    everything works fine except for the video drivers that crash everytime when i install any driver (bootcamp or manually).
    So I've searched on many forums n i found a guy that could do that by using Vmware/Virtualbox by accessing the full disk n installing it from there.
    Here's what we wrote -> (http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1526883)
    "Thanks for the suggestions, but installing from usb wasn't working, and refit didn't recognise the external dvd drive too (it was in the list, but when i tried to load it i got an error).
    But i found a solution, not usual procedure but still good and easy to do.
    I installed virtualbox, created a virtual machine with the full disk access (you'll have to unmount all the partitions first and run virtualbox as root), started installing windows, when the copy of the files ended and the vm was rebooting i simply closed it and rebooted my imac and finished the installation directly on the imac, everything went well...
    Thanks again for the help"
    Important notes :
    - My superdrive is broken
    - I can't boot efi windows 7 (cause it needs efi 2.0)
    So i might ask u 2 things..
    1- Is there a way that i can install all those drivers on windows 8.
    2- Can u describe how he did that with Vmware/Virtualbox?

    I can't. Just like i said. My superdrive is broken so the only way is to boot from usb but my imac's efi firmware is 1.0 and to boot a windows 7 efi you must have at least efi firmware 2.0. I managed to install windows 8 cause it needed efi firmware 1.0 that's why.

  • I can't install Windows 8.1 on my Imac with Mavericks using Bootcamp. Why?

    I can't install Windows 8.1 on my Imac 27" with Mavericks using Bootcamp. Why? I first did all the software updates needed, downloaded the driver software to a 32Gb flash drive formatted as FAT32, fired up Bootcamp Assistant, inserted the Windows 8.1 Full version 64 bit installation DVD as requested, and got as far as partitioning (tried this at 82 Gb for the Windows partition), then the MAC rebooted but halted before getting to the login page. Then a black screen came up with the error message: 'non-system disk - Press any key to reboot'. I did this and nothing happened. I was forced to shut down forcibly then restart with my finger held down on the option key. Then a screen came up with two icons: the macintosh HD icon and the Windows DVD icon. I double-clicked on the Windows DVD icon and the MAC came up with another black screen and error message: 'CDBoot: Couldn't find BOOTMGR'. Had to shut down forcibly again and restart as before, this time ejecting the Windows DVD first. Then I repartitioned my MAC back to all OSX. What the **** do I do now? Applecare couldn't help me beyond this point. They said to contact Microsoft. I notice a lot of other MAC owners have had similar problems.
    Please help? tagjsmith.

    bootcamp does not currently support windows 8.1

  • HELP! installing windows 7 on imac late 2009

    Ok, I've read a hundred threads on how to install Windows 7 on a new iMac, I've talked to the Apple "experts" on the phone, and I still can't get it right.
    I've used Bootcamp to create my hard drive partition (200 GB). I've downloaded the drivers from Apple (iMacLate_2009_Win7Drivers) and placed the drivers on a flash drive that was formatted as specified on this page:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/TS3173
    The flash drive now is called "MBRFAT". The article says to put the drivers on the flash drive not in any subfolders, but the file I downloaded has the drivers already in a subfolder ("drivers"). Do I put that whole subfolder on the flash drive or do I try and find the drivers within that folder? I tried copying the whole "drivers" folder as well as the AutoUnattend.xml to the flash drive.
    I went through the whole Windows install and still ended up a blank black screen for over 20 minutes.
    What am I doing wrong???
    FYI, I'm using Bootcamp 3.0.1 (tried to upgrade to 3.1, but only found the .exe upgrade file which I assume can only be ran after I install windows). I also have updated my OS so I'm now on 10.6.3.

    ok first of all, you should not get a black screen after a fresh install of windows 7. as you were installing, the display was working, no? after the install is done you should see the desktop of windows 7. if all you see is a blank screen after a brand new installation of windows 7, you did something wrong in the install.
    what i would recommend is just start over. insert your windows install cd and restart, booting from it. go through the installation process as normal. when it is time to select the drive to install to, use the options to first erase and format the partition before selecting it to install. after this, it should install fine, and once it is done you should see the desktop (it will most likely be displayed in the wrong resolution, making it look fuzzy and weird). now you can copy the drivers from your flash drive to the desktop and install them. (sub-folders shouldnt make a difference. just copy it exactly how you downloaded it and you should be fine)
    good luck! let me know if you need more information/ more details/ whatever!

  • 27in iMac (late 2009) ATI 4850 drivers problem in Windows 7

    This iMac is less than a month old. Windows 7 was working fine until a couple of days ago. While at the Windows 7 desktop the screen pixlated and froze. A tip bubble appeared in the notification bar that said the ATI driver quit but was recovered. The screen went black then restored itself. A moment later the whole thing occurred again. Is this a known issue? Is there a fix? Thanks for any help.

    BANDING AND DRIVER CRASHING SOLVED:
    I bought the following iMac on April 18, 2010 to run Windows 7 and Autodesk REVIT 2011.
    27" iMac (Late 2009)
    Intel Core i7, quad-core, 2.8GHz
    8GB (4x2GB) memory
    1TB Hard Drive
    ATI Radeon HD 4850 512MB Display Adapter
    Apple Magic Mouse
    Apple Wireless Keyboard
    Apple BootCamp with Windows 7 Ultimate
    Installed OSX, downloaded and installed all updates.
    Installed BootCamp 3.1
    Installed Windows 7 Ultimate 64bit and had the problem of the black screen during install. This was solved with the fix from apple support (copy latest drivers to a flash drive and continue to install windows). This resulted in apple windows driver 8.681.0.0 and the 16 bit color with banding. Rolled back the driver to 8.661.0.0. The banding issue was solved, but then had intermittent crashing (reset of the driver) in Chrome and REVIT 2011. This driver caused yellow "dots", then lockup and generally would reset. Very disruptive to REVIT.
    SOLUTION:
    Went to ATI website and downloaded Catalyst 10.4, then manually installed ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4850 display driver version 8.723.0.0. This display driver has 32 bit color, does NOT exhibit the color banding and has not had screen flicker, driver resets, or crashing in any programs run so far. I use this computer only for Autodesk REVIT 2011. The ATI HD 4850 is not officially supported by Autodesk, but I am able to run REVIT 2011 with hardware acceleration and anti-aliasing with no problems. So far that has been only for one day, but was not able to go more than a few minutes with the previous drivers.
    I have not run any speed benchmarks yet, but compared to my Windows 32 bit XP machine, the performance is much improved.

  • Installing windows 7 on mac book pro late 2013

    Installing Windows 7 on Mac Book Pro Late 2013
    Background
    Mac Book Pro Late 2013 uses a USB 3.0 hub for the external ports, the keyboard and mouse devices.
    Windows 7 does not have the drivers to support USB 3.0 ports so these must be integrated into the boot.wim and install.win files so that Win7 can be installed and used on a Mac. If these drivers are not integrated when win7 is booted up then the mouse and keyboard will not function.
    Requirements:
    Two USB Flash drives
    Access to a Mac computer
    Bootcamp Assistant application
    Access to a Windows computer with windows 7 installed
    Windows 7 install disk or ISO file
    WinUSB application
    Windows Automated Installation Kit for Windows 7 (WAIK)
    Method
    On a Mac
    First prepare a USB Flash drive by formatting it using disk util app, found in Application Utility folder, to FAT format this will store the Apple drivers that can be downloaded from Apple using BootCamp.
    This will be called USB1
    Using Boot Camp Assistant select 'Download the latest windows support software from Apple'  to get the files from apple for win7 for your particular machine these will be downloaded and copied to the USB Flash drive called USB1.
    On a PC
    Using a PC download a copy of WinUSB from  www.joshcellsoftwares.com this software can create a bootable USB with the win 7 files copied on to it.
    Obtain a copy of Windows 7 either in DVD or ISO format.
    Using WinUSB and the Win7 DVD create a second bootable USB Flash drive. This will be called USB 2.
    About DISM
    DISM is a windows application that allows the editing of windows image files with the extension of WIM.
    If DISM is not installed on the PC it can be downloaded from windows website.
    To test to see if DISM is installed, open up a command prompt. Then type 'dism' without the quotes this will display the help description of DISM. 
    Drivers
    The apple drivers need to be added to the boot.wim file so that mouse and keyboard can function during the setup phase.
    The apple drivers need to be added to the install.wim so that mouse and keyboard can function after the setup phase.
    The video drivers are also added as it appears to cause problems if they are not included.
    Create a directory structure like this:
    c:\appleboot\
    drvrs
    mount
    win7x64install
    win7x64boot
    Create the following files in c:\appleboot\ with the following code:
    adddrivers.cmd
    color 0a
    dism /image:c:\appleboot\mount /add-driver /driver:c:\appleboot\drvrs /recurse
    ================================================================================ ==========
    mountboot.wim.cmd
    color 0a
    dism /mount-wim /wimfile:c:\appleboot\boot.wim /index:2 /mountdir:c:\appleboot\mount
    ================================================================================ ==========
    mountinstall.wim.cmd
    color 0a
    dism /mount-wim /wimfile:c:\appleboot\install.wim /index:4 /mountdir:c:\appleboot\mount
    ================================================================================ ==========
    unmountcommitfiles.cmd
    color 0a
    dism /unmount-wim /mountdir:c:\appleboot\mount /commit
    ================================================================================ ==========
    Copy the following files into their respective directories:
    Copy from USB 1 into drvrs the $WinPEDriver$ directory
    Copy from USB 2 \sources\boot.wim to win7x64boot directory, this will store the original file
    Copy from USB 2 \sources\install.wim to win7x64install directory, this will store the original file
    Then copy boot.wim from win7x64boot directory to the c:\appleboot\ directory
    Then copy install.wim from win7x64install directory to the c:\appleboot\ directory
    Once all the copying is completed then run the following cmd files in this order:
    For boot.wim
    mountboot.wim.cmd - this will mount the file for adding of drivers
    adddrivers.cmd - this will add the apple drivers to the mounted boot.wim
    unmountcommitfiles.cmd – this will commit the changes and unmount the boot.wim
    For install.wim
    mountinstall.wim.cmd- this will mount the file for adding of drivers
    adddrivers.cmd - this will add the apple drivers to the mounted install.wim
    unmountcommitfiles.cmd – this will commit the changes and unmount the install.wim
    Copy the files back to USB 2
    Copy the boot.wim and install.wim files from c:\appleboot\ directory  to USB 2 sources directory and overwrite the files.
    BOOTABLE USB
    You will now have a bootable USB Flash Drive that has the additional drivers needed to install Win7 on Mac Book Pro Late 2013.
    Mac Preparation
    On your Mac using Disk Util reduce the size of the partition of Macintosh HD so that there is approx. 80GB free for the use of Win7.
    Add a second partition, label it win7 and format it to FAT. This is so that win 7 setup can identify the correct partition.
    Installing Windows 7
    Insert USB 2 into your Mac and reboot, whilst holding the option key down.
    After reboot there will be three icons displayed one is the Mac operating system, the second is the recovery partition and the third is an orange icon indicating a bootable USB drive.
    Select this and win7 setup application will proceed to boot up with the keyboard and mouse functioning.
    Follow the prompts and when the drive selection appears select the win7 partition and format it to NTFS so that win7 can be installed. When windows setup reboots press and hold down the option key and select the windows partition so that setup can continue to install.
    After completion of installation of win7 insert USB 1 with the additional apple drivers. Goto the bootcamp directory and click on setup.exe file this will install additional drivers needed to use Win7 on a Mac.
    Once completed reboot your Mac and select windows to allow the drivers to update in windows.

    Yes this is correct that the /index:4 refers to the ultimate version of windows in mountinstall.wim.cmd
    dism /mount-wim /wimfile:c:\appleboot\install.wim /index:4 /mountdir:c:\appleboot\mount
    Users should do what applekryzzle suggested if you have a different version of windows. Thanks for the tip applekryzzle.
    With regards to the Intel(R) USB 3.0 eXtensible Host Controller drivers they are the ones that are provided by apple via boot camp assistant.
    These appear to work correctly and downloading as per instructions simplifies the procedure.
    For those that are interesred the updated drivers can be found here https://downloadcenter.intel.com/Detail_Desc.aspx?agr=Y&DwnldID=22824&ProdId=346 7&lang=eng&OSVersion=Windows%207%20%20*&DownloadType=Drivers
    I have also seen in other discussions that some users get black screens i believe that it is the lack of video drivers which is included in the download from apple using boot camp assistant.
    I'm certain that this works on Mac Book Pro Late 2013 models and i feel confident that this will work with other models.
    I will appreciate any feedback if this works on other models.

  • Trying to install Windows with Bootcamp

    Hello. First, I do know this has been a recurrent trouble for a lot of Mac user who have tried to install Windows using Bootcamp. Believe me, I've looked it up both here in the Apple Communities and in saint Google. My situation is, however, that I have replaced my optical drive with a SSD, and now my optical drive works externally, via USB. Everytime I try to install Windows in a dedicated partition in the SSD, it just stays forever in a blank screen with blinking cursor.
    Apple's troubleshot won't work for me, and I'm beginning to think that the issue has more to do with the optical drive itself. I tried:
    To install Windows on the HDD instead of SSD.
    To unplug every USB (even mouse), except for the optical drive with Windows 7.
    To install it via USB stick (creating a bootable .iso with Disk Utility). In this case the usb stick does not even appear when holding option key.
    To try another Windows 7 version (32/64 bits).
    I have even read it might be because of a bad installation of the RAM memory... this makes no sense?!
    If anyone has encountered this same situation, I'd appreciate some help. Hope I can get this done, because Steam's Age Of Empires won't ever work in OS X :S
    Thank you all for reading and helping!
    MacBook Pro
    13-inch, Early 2011
    2,3 GHz Intel Core i5
    8 GB 1333 MHz DDR3
    OS X 10.9.5

    If your Mac was originally configured with a built-in Optical drive, and it was later replaced, Bootcamp knows your original configuration and will not work properly in the modified configuration, because it uses your Mac's model string (found in About This Mac -> More Info -> System Report -> Hardware) for example, MacbookPro 11,3. The only supported method to install Windows is to restore the original HW configuration and install it and then move hardware around.
    Please see Unable to Install Windows 8 on secondary Hard Disk .

  • How to have Snow Leopard, Mavericks with built-in recovery, and Windows 7 (Bootcamp) on my iMac (Intel)?

    I would like to have Snow Leopard, Mavericks with built-in recovery, and Windows 7 (Bootcamp) on my iMac (Intel).  Is this possible?  If so, how?  Currently, I have Snow Leopard and Windows 7 (Bootcamp) running on my iMac.  I have enough disk space to split my Snow Leopard partition.  I have read that if I split my Snow Leopard partition, clone my Snow Leopard partition to the new partition, and boot to the new partition, that I may have problems with the Maverick's upgrade because it may not be able to create the recovery parition, or that it may erase the Windows partition, or that it may mess up the Windows boot process.

    Simplest is to install Mavs on an ext HD, using FW or TB. I don't do windoze, so can't advise about the Boot Camp and multiple volumes issue. Since there's no Boot Camp, I have four volumes running SL through Mavs.

  • Cant install windows with bootcamp only BSoD

    yesterday i install mountain lion on my mbp late 2011 and cant install windows with bootcamp now i only became BSoD.
    can anyone help me?

    Post in the Boot Camp forum:
    https://discussions.apple.com/community/windows_software/boot_camp

  • I just installed 16gb in my 21" iMac late 2009 and I have macbook 13" late 2008. Can I put the 2gb 2rx8-8500s-07-10-f2 ram in the laptop.  Does anyone know the difference of 2gb 2rx8-8500s-07-10-f2 and 2gb 2rx8-8500s-07-10-f1 . thank you!

    I just installed 16gb in my 21" iMac late 2009 and I have macbook 13" late 2008. Can I put the 2gb 2rx8-8500s-07-10-f2 ram in the laptop.  Does anyone know the difference of 2gb 2rx8-8500s-07-10-f2 and 2gb 2rx8-8500s-07-10-f1 . thank you!

    I followed your instructions and installed Developer Suite 10G on Windows Vista Home Premium edition. I have Oracle 11G DB running on the same machine.
    Two points, Steve:
    1. When I tried to set the maximum virtual memory to 6110 an error message displayed from Windows and told me that I can't set the maximum virtual memory to more than 4096. I set it to 4090 and it worked and I got nothing wrong during the installation process.
    2. After installing JInitiator and disabling Java on Firefox I called the http://127.0.0.1:8889/forms/frmservlet page and everything seemed to be OK because the Oracle Forms Services logo appeared and then a successful installation message appeared , but as I clicked (ok) to continue a gray screen appeared inside the browser (like the one displayed when you try to run a Java applet inside a browser) and then I wait to death till something appears but sadly nothing. I just get a blank gray screen inside my Firefox browser.
    Do you have any idea what to do to solve the problem?
    Regards

  • How do I install windows 7 on a macbook pro mid 2009 using bootcamp and no optical drive?

    How do I install windows 7 on a macbook pro mid 2009 using bootcamp and no optical drive?
    My optical drive is non-functional and I want to dual boot with win7. The only problem is my macbook does not boot from USB at all, even when I hold th ALT key down when it is starting up.
         -I have a flashdrive with win7 on it.
         -I mounted the ISO of win7 with toast for bootcamp to do its thing.

    Good luck.
    Consider this a bump so that hopefully someone with better news spots your thread.
    Allan

  • How do I install windows and bootcamp on my macbook Air

    Hi
    I need to install Windows and Bootcamp on my macbook Air, due to a software tool a customer needs that only runs on windows.
    The initial instructions say I cannot do this with a remote DvDplayer,
    Who has experienced this?
    Chris

    http://manuals.info.apple.com/en_US/boot_camp_install-setup_10.7.pdf

Maybe you are looking for