Time Machine after installing a new Hard Disk Drive

Sorry I just posted this to the Time Capsule section by mistake!!! Hopefully this is the right place !
Having used my 1Gig Time Capsule for nearly 8 months the HDD failed last week on my MacBook. After replacing the HDD and after nearly 18 hours the HDD was backed-up again. BUT ! ! !.........
........ I no longer had access to any data saved prior to the new HDD installation. Time Machine does show back-ups back to 4 July 2008 ! (old and new data being saved in the same bundle), but prior to the new HDD installation they are greyed out. So I can't access back-ups made on my MacBook with another drive fitted. I ask myself what good is that ?
Does anyone know how to work round this one please, or is all lost?
Thanks for anyone who reads this and a bigger thanks for anyone who replies with a possible solution.
regards
David

Great!
But . . . you may now have another problem. TM may not delete the "old" backups in the normal fashion. When it needs to make room for new ones, it may start deleting the oldest of the "new" set instead.
You can monitor this via your logs. Download the +Time Machine Buddy+ widget. It shows the messages from your logs for one TM backup run at a time, in a small window.
Every time TM runs, it deletes "expired" backups (hourlies after 24 hours, dailies after a month), and each one is documented in your log. So most backups will have one deletion. Navigate in the widget from backup to backup (it will only go back a few days) to see which ones are being deleted. If any of the old set are/were deleted after the drive replacement, you're fine.
If not, you'll have two rather bad choices: erase the drive (via Airport Utility) and let TM start over, or delete the old set, one at a time, via the TM interface. This is a tedious and time-consuming procedure, especially on a TC. Let us know if you need to do this, but don't know how.

Similar Messages

  • Problems Copying Time Machine Back-Up to New Hard Disk

    I tried copying my old time machine back-ups from a 500 GB WD HDD to a new Seagate 1TB. Followed the instructions from "Time Machine: How to transfer backups from the current backup drive to a new backup drive". Although terribly slow it seemed to work all well initially. Had it run over night, then discovered the next morning the process was apparently hanging.
    Thinking that maybe the energy saver options were the cause of the problem, I unchecked "put hard disk to sleep when possible". So went through the same painful process. Cannot believe that after about 7 h of transfering the whole thing is stuck again:
    More than 2 million items were apparently copied, now nothing is happening at all... (neither GB nor minutes changing anymore)
    1) Is this a common problem? More importantly: how can it be solved?
    2) Is there another way to transfer time machine back-ups to another hard disk?
    Thanks!

    This is getting (more) annoying: turned out that something went wrong with the 500 GB HDD with the original time machine back-up. Managed to repair it in the 3rd attempt with disk utility. Heard of SuperDuper and thought I'd give it a try.
    Cloning the back-up disk to the new 1 TB HDD seemed to work well, but I am a bit surprised with the result:
    It seems time machine recognizes now the 1 TB Seagate HDD as a 500 GB (the size of the original WD) only?

  • I'm getting a -2003F error when trying to run the internet recovery after installing a new hard disk in my macbook pro, any suggestions?

    After installing a new hard drive in my 2011 macbook pro, I'm getting a apple.com/support -2003F error when trying to run the internet recovery.  Any suggestions?

    Did you format the new HDD?  What is the status of the old HDD?
    Do you have an early or late 2011 MBP?
    Ciao.

  • Can I restore a time machine backup to a new hard disk

    I've just had the HDD replced in my iMac 24 under Applecare Warranty. The data had been backed up on an external HDD using Time Machine.
    The only way I can see to restore the data is reinstal the OS and do a migration. This seems unwieldy, to say the least.
    Can I restore the backup direct to the iMac somehow?
    The backup was done when the iMac ran 10.6. It has come back with 10.5 installed.

    Take a look at Pondini's excellent TM articles, particularly this one -
    http://pondini.org/TM/14.html
    You should be able to restore your system in full if you backed up system folders as well as your data and applications.
    Otherwise, Use the retail Snow Leopard DVD to install Snow over Leopard (no erasing required), then use Setup Assistant from the new installation to migrate from TM.

  • Reinstall T60p after install a new hard disk

    Hi....
    I have a T60p that was purchased in 2006/2007, ages ago with 120GB hard drive. In fact, my notebook is still in good shape....
    I am currently thinking of buying a new hard drive with bigger size, say 500GB, to replace the original one...but I am not sure if the original reinstallation CDs would allow me to reinstall the whole system on the new hard drive.
    Anyone can share their expertise with me???
    Thanks a million...
    Clarence...

    You can run the recovery disks on the newer hdd too
    Please check the knowledge base article 
    http://forums.lenovo.com/t5/E-S-series-ThinkCentre-Desktops/Rescue-amp-Recovery-disks-authenticated-...
    Cheers and regards,
    • » νιנαソѕαяα∂нι ѕαмανє∂αм ™ « •
    ●๋•کáŕádhí'ک díáŕý ツ
    I am a volunteer here. I don't work for Lenovo

  • Setting up time machine/time capsule after fitting a New Hard Drive.

    I have replaced my hard drive in my imac 24inch and restored the system from my time capsule. My question is now my time machine is trying to back up to my time capsule but it is already 3/4 full from the old drive in my imac. How do i best set up my time capsule with time machine after installing a new hard drive in the imac. I was hoping that i would restore the system and I would still be able to (after pointing time machine to my time capsule) access old files if needed in time machine. It has presently deleted a lot of older backups but still cannot fit it all in as it just sees a new hard drive worth of info and is attempting to back it all up on my time capsule.

    wjosten wrote:
    Me, I would never use Time Machine to do this. What I'd suggest you do is get an exterior enclosure for your new drive. Then use either Carbon Copy Cloner or SuperDuper to clone your existing drive to your new drive. Once done, verify your clone is bootable & all of your data present. Then swap drives & use your old drive for Time Machine backups(after erasing it). Then get another drive & exterior enclosure to regularly clone your new drive to.
    Unless he was swapping for a lower capacity HDD or to a lower capacity SSD, then the old drive would make a lousy Time Machine disk.  However, whenever I swap out a disk I do exactly what you do.  CCC to get the ol drive onto a new one.  Test by starting up to the new (but still external drive).  Then replace the internal drive.
    I usually just sell the old drive on eBay.  My Time Machine backup is always 2X the size of the internal drive, which I believe is a bit above recommendations, but works for me.  The price of large external drives is almost the same as smaller internal ones.

  • I cannot access an older time machine backup after installing an new hard drive.

    After installing a new hard drive I tried to access my older backups in time machine but cannot. They are there but do not light up and allow me to access them, or select them.

    First, if you're worried about the possibility of losing a backup set, then your backup strategy is inadequate. You will certainly lose those backups, no matter what you do, when the drive hosting them fails, as it will eventually. If you take data safety seriously, you should have at least two complete, independent backups of all your data, one of which is off-site at all times. I suggest you make a second backup now, before doing anything else.
    The action I suggested won't delete all the snapshots; only the selected one -- unless something goes wrong, which is always possible. Without adequate backups, nothing you do is safe.

  • I am trying to do a full Time Machine Backup to a new external disk. The backup starts, and it says "Time remaining about 4 days." That seems like a very long time, but the real problem is that the computer "logs off" after a few hours, and the b.u. stops

    I am trying to do a full Time Machine Backup to a new external disk. The backup starts, and it says "Time remaining about 4 days." That seems like a very long time, but the real problem is that the computer "logs off" after a few hours, and the backup stops. The system preferences are set to "Never" for Computer sleep and Display sleep. The computer does not ordinarily log off automatically, but it has done this twice since I started the Time Machine backup.

    If you have more than one user account, these instructions must be carried out as an administrator.
    Launch the Console application in any of the following ways:
    ☞ Enter the first few letters of its name into a Spotlight search. Select it in the results (it should be at the top.)
    ☞ In the Finder, select Go ▹ Utilities from the menu bar, or press the key combination shift-command-U. The application is in the folder that opens.
    ☞ Open LaunchPad. Click Utilities, then Console in the icon grid.
    Make sure the title of the Console window is All Messages. If it isn't, select All Messages from the SYSTEM LOG QUERIES menu on the left. If you don't see that menu, select
    View ▹ Show Log List
    from the menu bar.
    Enter the word "Starting" (without the quotes) in the String Matching text field. You should now see log messages with the words "Starting * backup," where * represents any of the words "automatic," "manual," or "standard." Note the timestamp of the last such message. Clear the text field and scroll back in the log to that time. Select the messages timestamped from then until the end of the backup, or the end of the log if that's not clear. Copy them (command-C) to the Clipboard. Paste (command-V) into a reply to this message.
    If all you see are messages that contain the word "Starting," you didn't clear the search box.
    If there are runs of repeated messages, post only one example of each. Don't post many repetitions of the same message.
    When posting a log extract, be selective. Don't post more than is requested.
    Please do not indiscriminately dump thousands of lines from the log into this discussion.
    Some personal information, such as the names of your files, may be included — anonymize before posting.

  • Re: After Restoring to New Hard Disk, No Windows Update - a Fix

    How about this one? I bought a Toshiba Laptop while living for some time in the U.S. Admittedly I was stupid not to create the reinstall disk that Toshiba suggested I create when I bought the computer. So I call them to order a new one after installing a new hard drive. Toshiba USA does not accept a Canadian VISA card (that works everywhere else!) and Toshiba Canada "doesn't carry" the US version and therefore cannot supply me with one. Microsoft claims it's out of their hands. I have a legitimate activation key that only works if I use a Toshiba install disk. I tried installing a regular retail version that has no discernible difference to Toshiba's OEM install and I am getting the "This is not a genuine copy" error message because I am using an OEM key on a retail install. Microsoft's solution is to buy a retail version for $149 CDN even though I own it already. Toshiba offers their apologies for my inconvenience and shrugs with perplexity. Other than the obvious (paying $149 for a new version, which I flat out WILL NOT do) any other intelligent solutions? I will destroy this computer and never buy a Toshiba product again before I will pay $149 for a new OS.

    I have a legitimate activation key that only works if I use a Toshiba install disk
    Wrong right there. When you restore the hard disk to its original out-of-the-box contents using Toshiba recovery discs, no key is necessary. That version of Windows is preactivated.
    You cannot obtain an Windows installation disc from Toshiba. 
    I tried installing a regular retail version that has no discernible difference to Toshiba's OEM install and I am getting the "This is not a genuine copy" error message because I am using an OEM key on a retail install.
    You haven't disclosed the model of your computer. You already paid for the version of Windows that came with it. If you do this right, Microsoft will give you a key to activate that version.
    Which computer?
    -Jerry

  • I have apple macbook pro mid 2009 ... my hard disk stopped working and i had mac os 10.6.8 in it ... i bought a new hard disk drive but i didn't have my CD so i installed my friend's mac os 10.5.8 in the new hard disk ... i want to get my 10.6.8 back

    I have apple macbook pro mid 2009 ... my hard disk stopped working and i had mac os 10.6.8 in it ... i bought a new hard disk drive but i didn't have my CD so i installed my friend's mac os 10.5.8 in the new hard disk ... i want to get my previous 10.6.8 back ... hope there is a way to do so

    Upgrading to Snow Leopard
    You must purchase Snow Leopard through the Apple Store: Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard - Apple Store (U.S.). The price is $19.99 plus tax. You will be sent physical media by mail after placing your order.
    After you install Snow Leopard you will have to download and install the Mac OS X 10.6.8 Update Combo v1.1 to update Snow Leopard to 10.6.8 and give you access to the App Store. Access to the App Store enables you to download Mountain Lion if your computer meets the requirements.
         Snow Leopard General Requirements
           1. Mac computer with an Intel processor
           2. 1GB of memory
           3. 5GB of available disk space
           4. DVD drive for installation
           5. Some features require a compatible Internet service provider;
               fees may apply.
           6. Some features require Apple’s MobileMe service; fees and
               terms apply.

  • After installing a new hard drive can I install snow leopard directly from snow leopard disc

    After installing a new hard drive can I install snow leopard directly from snow leopard disc. Or do I have to install previous versions first. iMac 7.1 (2007) 2.8ghz

    You can install directly, assuming the disk is newer than your computer and not designed for a different Mac, but doing so won't install iLife.
    (64305)

  • I see that i have a problem after installing my new hard drive on my macbook pro mid 2009 version. I put a new hard drive, with all of my information from my old drive installed on it, into the computer. but now have the blinking question mark folder

    i see that i have a problem after installing my new hard drive on my macbook pro mid 2009 version. I put a new hard drive, with all of my information from my old drive installed on it, into the computer. but now have the blinking question mark folder. I see that it means that it isn't reading the new hard drive.
    did i miss a step between transferring all of my information from my old hard drive to the new hard drive and installing the new hard drive into the computer. I believe that i installed properly. it was quite easy.
    thanks for your help

    It means there is no bootable system on the drive. If you still have access to the old drive, then I suggest you boot from it then clone it to the new internal drive. Use OPTION boot to boot from the Recovery HD on the old drive:
    Boot to the Recovery HD:
    Restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the OPTION key until the boot manager screen appears. Select the Recovery HD and click on the downward pointing arrow button.
         1. Select Disk Utility from the main menu then press the Continue
             button.
         2. Select the destination volume from the left side list.
         3. Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
         4. Select the destination volume from the left side list and drag it
             to the Destination entry field.
         5. Select the source volume from the left side list and drag it to
             the Source entry field.
         6. Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
    Source means the external old drive. Destination means the new internal drive.

  • How do I encrypt my Time Machine Backup on the External Hard disk

    I have taken a backup of my data onto an external Hard Disk. I have used the Time Machine application to take the back up.
    I want to encrypt this time machine backup on the External Hard disk. Any suggestions???

    jcorroon wrote:
    The Encrypt Backup Disk is greyed out for me. Any suggestions?
    Many thanks!
    Have you selected the disk?
    You can only encrypt disks that are directly-connected (ie, not on a network), with the GUID partition map scheme.
    Put your mouse pointer on the dimmed checkbox, and after a moment an explanation should appear.

  • What to do after installing a new hard drive on inspiron 1525

    after installing a new hard drive on my inspiron 1525 I place the drivevers and utilities driver on the cd/dvd player drive, chose boot from cd/dvd drive, and I get this message
    your cd/dvd drive during this boot cycle is f:
    a RAMDISK drive is available for this boot cycle as C:
    it contains several hard drive setup tools. Please use these tools only under the direction of dell support staff.
    F:\>
    What do i enter after F:\>        ?????????
    <ADMIN NOTE : Email Id removed per Privacy policy>

    Hello Warren,
    To understand the issue and help you further, I would request you to help me with few details about the issue.
    -- What exactly is happening when you turn on the computer?
    -- Do you see a black screen with a blinking cursor?
    -- What is the Operating System?
    -- What is the System Model?
    Run a hardware diagnostics to check if there is any hardware failure.
    -- Restart the computer.
    -- Keep tapping F12 key on the Dell Logo screen.
    -- From One Time Boot Menu, select Diagnostics and press Enter.
    -- If the test fails please capture the Error Code and write back to us would be glad to assist with the next course of action.

  • How to transfer time machine back up to new hard drive

    How to transfer time machine back up to new hard drive?

    You may like to take a look at this thread... https://discussions.apple.com/thread/4207670?start=0&tstart=0

Maybe you are looking for