Make Lion Boot Disc Without Lion Installer?

I'm trying to make an OS X Lion boot disc. A failed Windows 8 Bootcamp install killed my Mac, but luckily I had a Time Machine backup which was accessible via the Recovery Disk. However, I would still like to have a boot disc handy in case something like this happens again and the Recovery Disk is somehow corrupted.
I Googled(among other things) how to make one, and the instructions seem fairly simple. Only, I can't find a Mac OS X Lion Installer anywhere. When I bought my refurbished iMac from Apple, OS X Lion was already on it. Since I didn't download it from the App Store it seems I don't have the Lion Installer to make a boot disc... Anything I can do (besides wasting $30 to redownload Lion from the App Store for the file) ? Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Start here: Downloading Hardware Specific Lion Installers
The above will get you the installer if you follow their instructions carefully. Then once you have it:
Make Your Own Lion Installer
1. After downloading Lion you must first save the Install Mac OS X Lion application. After Lion downloads DO NOT click on the Install button. Go to your Applications folder and make a copy of the 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 Lion.
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 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.
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 several hours depending upon the drive size.
3. Locate the saved 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 InstallESD.dmg disc image to the flash drive as follows:
Open Disk Utility.
Select the USB flash drive from the left side list.
Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
Check the box labeled Erase destination.
Select the USB flash drive volume from the left side list and drag it to the Destination entry field.
Drag the InstallESD.dmg disc image file 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 Lion installer that  you can use without having to re-download Lion.

Similar Messages

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    Hi there,
    When Lion was release I updated from the App Store.
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    (Well I do have my Leopard install disc)
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    Thanks!
    Matthew

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    One will need a blank external GUID OS X Extended journaled (aka: "JHFS+") formatted drive and standard 4.7GB DVD(s)
    Step 1:
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    http://www.afp548.com/article.php?story=getting-lion-installers
    Step 2:
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    Launch Disk Utility and click the burn button.
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    http://eggfreckles.net/notes/burning-a-lion-boot-disc/

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    Read this about creating a lion recovery on an external drive or USB stick.
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    You can make a bootable USB stick to install using this free program which will do all the work for you.
    Bootable USB Flash Drive – Diskmaker X
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  • 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?
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  • How can I make an Install Disc for Lion 10.7.5, when it already installed

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    Thank you... I will take your advice and relax...
    OK will do.
    As you can tell, I totally disagree with apple on this.... It should be a DEFAULT that the ability to make a DVD start up disc is always there... not the other way around.
    I have spent hours on this upgrade... upgrading the Snow Leopard, upgrading to Lion, Installing new hardware, re-installing new hardware, re-installing the old hardware...
    Some people, like myself, have the ability to DIY, but I don't have the incredible highly detailed inside knowledge that I apparently have to possess...
    Thanx

  • How to get make a boot disk for lion

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    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.
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  • Can i create a snow leopard boot disc without the originals?

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    If your current drive is still functioning make a Clone of it to an external drive then hen you replace the internal Re-Clone that drive from the external.
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  • Creating a bootable Lion install disc/disk and using it

    Hi all,
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    8. Any advantages/disadvantages doing it this way (#7) as opposed to booting from the Lion install disc/disk created above?
    9. Another method I'm thinking of using is to (after cloning my SL installation) actually install Lion on my MBP over my current SL installation (shudders violently ), clone it to an external HD, then erase/zero the MBP's HD and clone my SL install back to my MBP. Has anyone done this? Again, I'm concerned that Lion will do something goofy and leave some kind of footprint behind, like maybe messing with firmware; cloning my SL installation back to my internal HD would not reverse a firmware change.
    10. Any constructive suggestions on anything related to any of these steps is welcome!
    Yes, I've searched and read a number of responses, but I'm hoping much of the "discovery" phase is over, and there are some "solid"/refined answers by now. My bottom line is to be able to play with Lion without having to depend on it.
    Thanks!
    Backup Lion Bootable 10.7  Disk
    Purchase and download Lion from the Mac App Store on any Lion compatible Mac running Snow Leopard.
    Right click on “Mac OS X     Lion”     installer and choose the option to     “Show Package Contents.”
    Inside the Contents folder     that     appears you will find a SharedSupport     folder and inside the     SharedSupport folder     you will find the “InstallESD.dmg.” This is         the Lion boot disc image we have all been waiting for.
    Copy “InstallESD.dmg” to         another folder like the Desktop.
    Launch Disk Utility and click     the     burn button.
    Select the copied “InstallESD.dmg” as the image to     burn,     insert a standard sized 4.7 GB DVD,     and wait for your new Lion Boot     Disc to come     out toasty hot.
    With this disc you can boot any Lion compatible Mac, andinstall10.7 just like you installed previous version of Mac OS X. Youcan even use Disk Utility's Restore function to image your Lion bootdisc image onto a external drive suitable for performing a cleaninstall on a optical-drive-less MacBook Air, or Mac mini server.

    tjk wrote:
    5. Using the install disc/disk created above, will it set up Lion on a DVD, flash drive, or external HD exactly as it would on a Mac (Recovery Disk, etc.)?
    DVD: no, flash drive: if it's large enough, external hard drive: yes
    6. How much space is needed on a destination disc/disk to install Lion?
    Whatever Apple minimum requirements are.
    7. Is it possible to boot from a different volume, mount this dmg, and install Lion from it?
    possibly, never tried it, it is a dmg so it's a volume all to itself, except it can't install to the same media it's on and can only install to something formatted with GUID and a OS X extended format, like a flash drive or hard drive large enough.
    DVD's can't be formatted with a GUID EFI partiton
    8. Any advantages/disadvantages doing it this way (#7) as opposed to booting from the Lion install disc/disk created above?
    Speed limitation of the media and bus your using, USB 1 is a slower than a hard drive with 7,200 RPM on a Firewire 800 port
    9. Another method I'm thinking of using is to (after cloning my SL installation) actually install Lion on my MBP over my current SL installation (shudders violently ), clone it to an external HD, then erase/zero the MBP's HD and clone my SL install back to my MBP.
    The problems come from installing Lion over a existing Snow Leopard setup that isn't quite pristine enough for Lions quirkyness, has tweaks or other software installed that breaks 10.7, requiring you to fix it.
    You can try it, you've got the 10.6 clone to option boot off of and restore from.
    Cloning back and forth is a performance enhancer, not a problem solver.
    Ideally it's best to clone 10.6, disconnect, zero and install 10.6, same user name, then up to 10.6.8, then to 10.7, then install programs from fresh sources/copies and then files returned last from backup off the clone (no migration assistant or it brings trouble back)
    This will ensure the best possible performance possible with the least trouble as everything is wiped and installed fresh. Only problem being your files it there is something wrong with them, which is easy to remedy to the cause as it's the only thing not pristine.
    Once you've got a pristine system, then clone that twice, once for a immediate update other for falling back a week, two weeks or even a month back.
    Has anyone done this? Again, I'm concerned that Lion will do something goofy and leave some kind of footprint behind, like maybe messing with firmware; cloning my SL installation back to my internal HD would not reverse a firmware change.
    Firmware is hardware specific not OS specific, of course it's possible a old version of a OS won't work with newer firmware, like 10.5 for instance perhaps because Apple has dropped all work on PPC code.
    10.6 and 10.7 are just fine with most all present firmware, however there will be a time where a new firmware update could disallow 10.6, likely when iOS X 10.8 Bobcat arrives.
    10. Any constructive suggestions on anything related to any of these steps is welcome! 
    Yes, I've searched and read a number of responses, but I'm hoping much of the "discovery" phase is over, and there are some "solid"/refined answers by now. My bottom line is to be able to play with Lion without having to depend on it.
    Cloning only clones the Lion OS X Partition, not the Lion Recovery Partition.
    A comptuer that is Lion capable will boot off a media with no Lion Recovery Partition.
    You need to create a Lion Disk Assistant USB which copies your Lion Recovery Partition.
    It's in my post.
    https://discussions.apple.com/message/16276201#16276201

  • Urgent: new macbook pro - without Lion

    I am not from the US,
    what should I do to get Lion for free, I'm entitled for it according to this:
    http://www.apple.com/macosx/uptodate/
    but I cant fill the forms since they regarded to US residents.
    What should I do, It's been almost 30 days since I bought it (From Apple Store in the US).

    You got yourself a new MacBook Pro without OS X Lion?
    Consider yourself lucky!
    If you get the free download, make a bootable DVD (or two) of it and save it, delete the installer you can always download it later.
    I wouldn't go installing Lion or using it now until you fully understand it and the bugs get worked out, perhaps about 6-8 months from now. (also third party programs and hardware drivers need to be updated)
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    http://www.eggfreckles.net/notes/burning-a-lion-boot-disc/
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  • Can i make a win 8.1 boot disc to restore a saved disc image

    I have a H8-1455PC with Win 8.1 installed.  I have a 4TB external drive installed.  I made a Windows image and saved it to the external drive.  In the event of a system problem or failure, can I make a boot disc that I could use to restore the image.  I have copied to DVD the Win 8 software that came with the system (5 DVD's).

    Hi,
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    Jaco
    ****I am not an HP employee****
    Please give a" Kudos, Thumbs Up" if advice received is relevant or" Accept as Solution" to assist other forum users having a similar problem.
    Errare humanum est.

  • Clean install lion when already on Lion?

    How do I clean install lion when i'm already on lion?

    Your best bet would be to create a Lion Boot Disc which is actually quite easy with the OS X Lion installer and Disk Utility.  The problem is that since your are already running Lion, I don't think it will allow you to re-download it to make the boot disc.  One option would be to clean install Snow Leopard, download the OS X Lion installer from the Mac App Store and make the boot disc.  It would be easier to use another computer that already has Snow Leopard installed and fully updated to make the boot disc.  All you would have to do is sign into the App Store on the other computer and Lion should be under purchased, just don't forget to log out if the other computer is not your own.  Regardless, here are the instructions on making a Lion Boot Disc:
    Performing a clean install of Lion is easy once you create a Lion Boot Disc.  How do I create a Lion Boot Disc, you ask?  That's easy too! Just follow these instructions:  http://www.macrumors.com/2011/07/18/make-an-os-x-lion-boot-disc/
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  • How do I get an Installation Disc for Lion after I already installed it.

    I am furious, with myself and Apple.... I started this journey of upgrading to Lion soley because I needed to increase the capacity of the HD on my early 2008 MBP. I saw that it was much easier with Lion, I didn't see or understand the part about only on brand new computers...
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    LIKE ....WHY CAN'T I MAKE A DVD OF MY INSTALL DISC AFTER THE INITIAL INSTALLATION OF LION?????? ESPECIALLY SINCE I DIDN"T GET ONE IN THE FIRST PLACE???
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    Darn Darn Darn.... I only upgraded as a step along the path of upgrading the Hard Drive.... NOW I CAN"T WITHOUT MAJOR HEADACHES.... Grrrrrr
    LOL
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    Thank you... I will take your advice and relax...
    OK will do.
    As you can tell, I totally disagree with apple on this.... It should be a DEFAULT that the ability to make a DVD start up disc is always there... not the other way around.
    I have spent hours on this upgrade... upgrading the Snow Leopard, upgrading to Lion, Installing new hardware, re-installing new hardware, re-installing the old hardware...
    Some people, like myself, have the ability to DIY, but I don't have the incredible highly detailed inside knowledge that I apparently have to possess...
    Thanx

  • I deleted Terminal application by mistake, how do I reinstall without Lion Disc? I downloaded via AppStore.

    I deleted Terminal application by mistake, how do I reinstall without Lion Disc? I downloaded via AppStore.

    Backup your user file folders to a external drive and disconnect.
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    Hold Command R and boot from the Lion Recovery Partition, get online in the upper right corner, reinstall Lion, it will simply install Lion again and your bundled programs without touching your files or most all third party programs.

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