New hard drive and time machine not backing up

I recently replaced my MacBook Pro's hard drive with a larger HD.  After replacing HD and making sure all my data is operating correctly, I noticed my Time Machine is not backing up.  I was hoping it would continue to backup daily as soon as I was back on my home network but no such luck.  Does anyone know how to re-establish my conncection and hopefully start where I left off with daily backups?  Thx

Check Pondini's Time Machine Troubleshooting.
B6 seems to be the topic you are looking for.

Similar Messages

  • New hard drive and time machine recovery

    I am planning to install a new ram and hard drive on my macbook in few days. I have been backing up the system through time machine for about a year.
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    level i wrote:
    I am planning to install a new ram and hard drive on my macbook in few days. I have been backing up the system through time machine for about a year.
    My question is once I install the new hardware how do I install everything through the time machine???
    see this link for instructions
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=1964018#14
    Does time machine back up software as well?
    it backs up the whole drive with everything on it which includes all software.

  • When using a Seagate 1T external hard drive and Time Machine to back up hourly, if I delete photo files from the Mac hard drive before the next back up, are these retained on the Seagate drive or will they be lost (overwritten) in the next backu in the ne

    Does Time Machine erase previously saved files if, say, photos are deleted from the Macbook upon the next update, or will they be stored indefinately despite the current status of the files stored on the computer? Eg. can I bckup photo files to a Seagate 1T disc and then delete them to make more room on the computer in the knowlwdge that they are always going to be on the Seagate disc? Sorry if this is very elementary but I have not used a back up before like this, and am not sure how successive backups are overlaid or retained. Thanks!!

    TM is not designed to do what you ask. As Allan wrote TM is an incremental backup not an archival solution.
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  • Backing up photos on iMac using external hard drive and time machine

    How do i back up photos from my imac using an external hard drive and time machine
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    Apple explains how to use Time Machine in http://support.apple.com/kb/ht1427.
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  • I reinstalled my system on a new hard drive, from time machine. However my old photos seem corrupt within aperture. iphoto seems okay.  Have you heard of this?

    I reinstalled my system on a new hard drive, from time machine. However my old photos seem corrupt within aperture. iphoto seems okay. New photos take a long time to load as well.
    Have you heard of this?
    Thanks

    We need a little more information to be able to help.
    However my old photos seem corrupt within aperture.
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    Are you shooting in raw? Is your library referenced or managed? Is your library on your system volume or on an external harddrive?
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    Léonie

  • Mac Mini Help Please!!! - Hard Drive and Time Machine

    Hello everyone,
    I return once more seeking your support if I may...
    I went down to the Genius Bar today, as my Mac Mini was having the multi-colour circle not-responding icon showing an awful lot, and it was struggling to perform simple tasks.
    I bought my mac mini 2 years ago (12-Mar-11), and I was told there was an I/O error; and i needed a new hard drive.
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    When a new hard drive is installed by Apple, can I restore my files with my 'My Passport' backup?
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    One more question if I may...
    Has anyone here had a new hard drive installed by Apple before, and if so, has the hard drive 'stood the test of time'
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    What utility are you using to backup your drive?
    Apple buys hard drives from major manufacturers like Toshiba, Samsung, Seagate, and Western Digital. The drives will last as long as any drive you would purchase from them. Some last long and some don't.
    Suffice to say the drives carry a specific warranty. That should give you an idea how long the manufacturer thinks it will last on average.
    You can restore files from your backup pretty easily in Mountain Lion. If you are using Time Machine then you can actually boot from a Recovery HD image that it places on your backup drive. To boot from it you must connect the backup drive, then restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the OPTION key until the boot manager appears. Select the icon for the Recovery HD and then click on arrow button beneath the icon.

  • External Hard Drive and Time Machine questions

    Hello, I am new here to the forums and I have looked all over for the answers to two questions that I have regarding external hard drives and the time machine feature.
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    Thanks in advance!

    Format the new SSD in Disk Utility to Mac OS Extended (Journaled) and that will solve question No. 1.
    After formatting, clone the new SSD using Disk Utility>Restore or Carbon Copy Cloner (down load from the Internet).  Test the new SSD and if it performs as expected, do the physical swap.
    Question No. 2.  Erase the Time Machine HDD using Disk Utility and then install Time Machine.  See this excellent website regarding Time Machine.
    http://pondini.org/OSX/Home.html
    If you want an external boot HHD, get another one and use Carbon Copy Cloner.  This will give you redundancy in backups as well which is a good strategy.  CCC also can update the contents in an incremental manner similar to Time Machine.
    Ciao.

  • New Hard Drive and drivers are not installing

    I recently got a new hard drive and now I cannot install drivers from the recovery disk.
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    Which computer? There is a label on the bottom.
    Exactly which hard drive is it? Give us the specific model so we can look it up.
    Windows cannot verify the digital signature for the drivers required for this device.
    If you have restored the hard disk to its original out-of-the-box contents using Toshiba recovery media, that probably means you restored to a drive with the new advanced-format technology.
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  • Help restore new hard drive via time machine back up in time capsule

    I have followed Pondini's How Do I Restore My Entire System from a backup on Time Capsule.  I get all the way to section G with No Problem.  I get to section H and my new Hard Drive does not appear in the Select a Destination box.  The icon indicating the system is calculating the size of the volume keeps moving.  Finally it stops searching/calculating and just offers the button "go back".  For some reason it doesnt recognize my new HD.  I open Disk Utility and perform a check and the hard drive appears to be working fine.  Any help would be greatly appreciated.

    Are you sure you formatted the new drive properly, per section (c) there?
    If that's not right, you can't install OSX on it.

  • Slow external hard drive and time machine un able to back up

    My Western Digital Elements 2 TB USB 2.0 Desktop external hard drive has become very slow to boot. I also use the same drive for time machine, which is now un able to back up. Is there anyway of increasing the speed, and fixing time machine without losing any data, as the drive is not backed up. Thanks.

    If Disk Utility can't repair it, there are some expensive third party products that may be able to do so, strictly for the purpose of extracting whatever files remain intact. I have none in particular to recommend.
    Some data is already certainly gone. The disk should be replaced regardless of any utility's ability to "repair" it.

  • Hard drives and Time Machine

    I purchased Super Duper and did a full backup on my Mac Pro (I have 3 hard drives, the main one and Two backup drives that are mounted on the desktop). Everything worked fine, I did the Super-Duper start-up/complete backup to one of the extra hard drives. The problem is when I run Time Machine it backs up everything including the extra copy of my computer that Super-Duper just created. This just filled up the extra hard drive that I use for Time Machine.
    My question...
    1) Is there a way to have the Super-Duper back-up copy of my computer but then not have it re-backed up by Time Machine? Do I need to remove the hard drive (the hard drive with the Super-Duper copy) from the desktop, and how do I do this... they are internal hard drives and not external hard drives.
    2) What is the best way to undo what I have done and get the space back on my extra hard drive that I am using for time machine?
    I know these are basic questions but I am new to Apple
    Thanks for the help

    There is a forum for Time Machine, and a library there of user contributed tips, FAQ, and more. There are 3rd party utilities to modify how and when, but you can always ignore a volume or folder from being watched by TimeMachine. By default it will backup any and all mounted volumes.
    I think the best place for backups, maybe other than T/M, is external and off line.
    http://discussions.apple.com/forum.jspa?forumID=1342

  • New Hard Drive installed - Time Machine wants to start over!?

    Info: My MacBook Pro is the old version. Plus I have not upgraded to Snow Leopard.
    I was running out of hard drive space so I took my MacBook to MacTown where I bought it on Monday night and they put in a 500GB hard drive for me. I asked if it would affect anything such as Time Machine, etc. They said it would not.
    When I plugged it in Tue. night (after I picked it up) I got a message saying that it needed about 300GB for the backup and it only had 200GB available (I use a 500GB external drive for my Time Machine backups). I called yesterday and asked if it had to do with the new hard drive. The guy said no, I just had too much stuff on my backup and needed to delete some of it.
    Well, last night I messed around with it and a)saw that Time Machine is supposed to delete old backups if it gets too full so this should not be the problem. b)I went into Time Machine and it does not show any old backups. It only has Feb. 1, 2010 as the last one. So, my conclusion: It does not recognize the old backup and wants to start over with my new hard drive.
    I called back today and spoke with the guy who did the work. I told him this and he said I should just delete the old backups from my external drive and start over (if I am sure there is nothing I will ever want on it). He said to go to Disk Utility and re-format it.
    My question: I am sure I don't need anything from the old backups, but am I not thinking of anything? Is there a chance they didn't copy something over, etc.?
    Any advice would be appreciated. I am not impressed with the MacTown people right now.
    Thanks,
    Peace

    Guitar Dude 7 wrote:
    Info: My MacBook Pro is the old version. Plus I have not upgraded to Snow Leopard.
    I was running out of hard drive space so I took my MacBook to MacTown where I bought it on Monday night and they put in a 500GB hard drive for me. I asked if it would affect anything such as Time Machine, etc. They said it would not.
    Tell them about this Apple article: http://support.apple.com/kb/TS1338
    It does say may, not will, but it always does for me, and there are lots of similar posts in these forums. (This was supposed to be fixed in Snow Leopard, but it still does it.)
    Well, last night I messed around with it and a)saw that Time Machine is supposed to delete old backups if it gets too full so this should not be the problem.
    That depends. It won't delete the last remaining backup. To do a new full backup requires as much space as the data it's backing-up, plus 20% for workspace, etc., on the TM drive.
    I went into Time Machine and it does not show any old backups. It only has Feb. 1, 2010 as the last one. So, my conclusion: It does not recognize the old backup and wants to start over with my new hard drive.
    I called back today and spoke with the guy who did the work. I told him this and he said I should just delete the old backups from my external drive and start over (if I am sure there is nothing I will ever want on it). He said to go to Disk Utility and re-format it.
    Correct. It is a new drive after all, and Time Machine's main role in life is to back-up anythng that's new or changed.
    That's your only choice (although you can just erase it).
    My question: I am sure I don't need anything from the old backups, but am I not thinking of anything? Is there a chance they didn't copy something over, etc.?
    No, most likely, that's your only option.
    Any advice would be appreciated. I am not impressed with the MacTown people right now.
    Unfortunately, even the Geniuses at Apple Stores don't know a lot about Time Machine; in some cases, the AppleCare folks aren't a lot better.
    You might want to review these:
    Time Machine Tutorial
    How to back up and restore your files
    Time Machine Features
    and perhaps browse the Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions *User Tip* at the top of this forum.

  • How do i install a new hard drive using time machine

    Hi there
    I have purchased a new 1TB hard drive for my Mac book pro (late 2008) model. I have time machine installaed on a seperate hard drive connected with an airport base station. I do not have the orginal snow leapoard/mountain lion OS CD or DVD. Can someone please tell me the exact steps to install the new hard drive .
    Thanks

    You haven't inserted your new hard drive yet?.
    There's two ways
    1. install yourself
    2. or pay someone to install it for you.
    If you want to do it yourself go to google and type in "install new hard drive for macbook pro". sometimes it makes a difference what model your macbook which is why i won't provide you a link just in case its the wrong one.
    Its very easy.
    1. remove all screws and the lid.
    2. remove screws from the black bracket which is holding your hard drive in place.
    3. unplug your hard drive.
    4. VERY IMPORTANT (A MISTAKE I MADE). make sure that you remove the external screws from your original hard drive as these screws are the one thing that hold and stabilise your hard drive and stop movement from happening.
    5. insert these external screws to your new hard drive (there are four screws)
    6. insert and plug your new hard drive.
    7. screw the black bracket in firmly
    8. attach lid and insert all screws firmly.

  • Problems with installing new hard drive using time machine

    Hi,
    I have a 2.4 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo 15" Macbook Pro (unibody) with 8 GB 1333 MHz DDR3 and a 250 GB Sata HD running OS 10.6.7.
    It works like a dream.
    However, i bought a new 1 TB HD (WD Scorpio Blue) since a) 250 GB is not enough for me right now b) warranty has expired, so new risk there and c) i read that installing it would be very easy.
    I'll try so explain what i did, see if anyone finds what could be wrong...
    I had some minor problem in the beginning (i didn't use the install disk of the macbook pro at first, because it was at the office, so i used the install disk of my old Alu iMac), but using the right disk, i opened "Restore Disk from Backup", selected the Time Machine disk, and waited for the target drive to appear. It didn't...
    Finally i figured, maybe he doesn't find it because it hasn't been formatted yet (although it says on the HD that the Scorpio Blue is ready to use as is). So i openen disk utility from the utility folder and formatted the disk as "OS Journaled". As expected (?) the disk appeared as a target Restore Disk. I selected it and "restore" started. It took some hours and finally i receive a message: restore complete (or something like that). But then... after the restart i say the apple logo (as always) followed by the 'i don't know how you call it'-screen: a grey screen coming down like a curtain that says something like: you have to hold down the power button and then press it again tot restart (in a dozen or so languages including mandarin or japanese...). Off course i tried to restart several times, always with the same result.
    I switched back to my old drive and it still works like a dream ;-)
    So now i'm typing this message, can someone point out to me what could be the problem?
    Some more information/possible causes:
    - i run snow leopard, but the install disk is leopard. Maybe i should have used the install disk of the Snow Leopard i bought?
    - the time machine backup backs up EVERYTHING including an external firewire disk (on the same disk). Maybe that could be a problem? I don't know if the backup disk will restore the content of my external disk to my new internal HD or not...
    Thanks for helping me out...
    Best regards,
    Tom

    Hold on... it seems like i missed the obvious answer: using snow leopard to re-install a snow leopard back up. I'll try that one first and if it doesn't work i'll come back to this discussion...

  • Help Restoring New Hard Drive from Time Machine

    To replace a failing Macintosh HD, I created an OS X Mountain Lion boot disk on a flash drive, put my new hard drive in a USB external dock, booted to the flash drive, partitioned and formatted the new drive (selecting GUID partition), and have tried and failed three times to restore from Time Machine, which is on a Firewire-connected drive. The error I get is that it's unable to create a restore disk.
    I could reformat the new drive and try again, but is there something else I'm missing? For example, should I have left the new drive in the external dock, or should I move it to bay 1 and then try to restore, considering that latency is a possible issue or that Time Machine won't restore to a USB drive?

    Why don't you install ML on it and then see?
    Better yet use any of the 4 internal drive bays instead of USB - slow and terrrible place!
    It does not matter where or what drive bay.
    Unable to unmount drive.
    CLONE your system - a couple times, pure Apple Mac OS once you have one and later for working copy and one before you install or apply updates or programs or otehr changes.
    CCC carbon copy cloner - will create recovery partition when you clone a system.
    I assume your flash drive works, not everyone is successful first shot.
    I prefer a clean install to start with. Esp as you say your system was failing I don't like relying on the Time Machine for everything.

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