Time Machine Restore to Different Hardware

I just replaced a crashed 20" Core Duo (first intel 20" model) with a 24" aluminum. I had full backups of the old system that I used to restore to the new system.
I didn't receive any errors, but I'm a little concerned that there may be issues with the OS X install because the original install was to a different hardware configuration. Should this be something to be concerned with or am I just worrying for no reason?
What triggered my concern is that I knew there was a firmware release for the display adapter released in Nov. for the adapter in the aluminum iMac (for the Radeon HD 2600). But when I ran software update after the restore, it says that my software was up-to-date. I tried to install the firmware manually, but it said that it wasn't required for my system. The firmware was released Nov. 15th and I picked the new iMac up yesterday (12/6). Is there a chance that the firmware was updated before I took delivery? I assumed not, since it still came with Tiger loaded and with a Leopard upgrade disk.
Does any of this make sense? Can someone tell me if this is nothing or is there a way to verify that I'm okay?
Thanks for your help,
Chris

Hi Chris,
As you are only concerned and not 100% sure that anything is wrong, and there is no concrete evidence that anything isn't working properly, I wouldn't worry about it for now. If your Mac is that new then first thing Monday I would call the Apple Support line and explain it to them. I believe the call is free during your warranty period. Make them earn their money.
pw

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    Message was edited by: metzen79

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  • Time Machine restore stalling on brand new 15" MBP (OS 10.10.1)

    Hi,
    Just bought a new MBP 15" and thought the migration process would be as easy as it's been for me since the intoduction of Time Machine. However for some unkown reason the Time Machine restore in Migration Assistant is stalling about 60% through,,, (saying 26 mins remaining for hours now).
    Has anybody encountered this on new computers running Yosemite? I am restoring from a Time Machine Backup via Thunderwire. Previous computer is in service with Apple, but was running the same version of Yosemite and all.
    Thank you in advance for any suggestions!

    The warranty entitles you to complimentary phone support for the first 90 days of ownership.
    If you bought the product in the U.S. directly from Apple (not from a reseller), you have 14 days from the date of delivery in which to exchange or return it for a refund. In other countries, the return policy may be different. If you bought from a reseller, its return policy applies.

  • Can time machine restore in new HDD?

    if i backup my mac os in an external hdd with time machine and then ill change my mac hdd, can time machine restore my os in new hdd?(for example by Recovery Disk Assistant)

    Naming it the same tends to make things easier. Time Machine can backup your entire OS as long as you haven't excluded anything in System Preferences/Time Machine/Options.
    Another option is to make a bootable clone. You should have more than one backup on 2 different drives since hard drives do fail.
    Clone  - Carbon Copy Cloner          (Often recommended as it has more features than some others)
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  • Time machine Restore Issue

    Hi, I recently started having some major operating system problems after installing the latest security update for OS 10.5.8 on my PowerMac G5. Im fairly certain that the download file was corrupted in some way because my substandard-expensive-archaic system that gives itself the undeserved title of "Internet Service" often loses bits of downloads and is generally very unreliable. Needless to say I decided to do a complete time machine restore. Thinking it was going to be as easy as it has been when Ive done it on other macs, I decided this was better than trying to fix the system issues (Which involved a repeated "There is no point for line" error about 45,000 times a day in the console logs, about which i could find no information). Anyway, I booted from my OS X dic and loaded time machine, selected my backup, and selected my destination drive and away we go! After about 2 and a half hours (which is to be expected with over 1,000,000 files totaling over 900GB of data) the restore finished....or so I thought. The screen said Restore Process Complete and the Progress bar cleared out but the restart button at the bottom of the window never showed up like it should. All I got was the spinning beach ball. So, thinking that the data had copied over and it should all be there anyway, I decided to force restart after waiting for about 2 hours for any progress. Upon restart I found that the newly restored drive was not bootable. Using Disk Utility on my OS X DVD I found that all the files were copied. So I tried it again, erasing the drive completely and then restoring from a backup with a slightly different time, and I got the same results. Any help would be awesome and ill be checking back to answer any questions about what info I may not have covered. Thanks!
    PS: I looked around for a similar posting but all the ones I found were involving hangs during the restore process (IE: 64%) and I didn't see anything quite like this, so if this issue has already been discussed then sorry for the double post.

    It sounds like something in your installation of OSX was corrupted, and got backed-up. So when you restore, you're restoring the problem.
    Your best bet is probably to do an +Erase and Install+ of Leopard, then use +Setup Assistant+ when your Mac restarts to transfer all your users, data, apps, and settings from the backups. See #19 in Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions (or use the link in *User Tips* at the top of this forum).
    Then download and install the "combo" update, to get back to 10.5.8. Info and download available at: http://support.apple.com/downloads/MacOS_X_10_5_8_ComboUpdate Be sure to do a +Repair Permissions+ via Disk Utility (in your Applications/Utilities folder) afterwards.

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