Upgrading Hard drive to SSD

I am not the original owner of the Macbook, so therefore when I try and reinstall OSX, it won't let me because my user was not the one that purchased the mountain lion upgrade. This Macbook did not come with any CDs and came with Office 2011 preinstalled. Is there any way for me to install the SSD and stil keep mountain lion and office without having to pay for it?

Welcome to the Apple Support Communities
One thing you can do is to restore the whole content of the HDD into the SSD, using the Disk Utility's Restore feature. To do this, you have to buy an enclosure for the HDD > http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/hard-drives/External-Enclosures/
The enclosure allows you to put the HDD in it and connect your HDD using USB or FireWire. Then, put the SSD into the MacBook, and follow these steps:
1. Hold Command, Option (Alt) and R keys while your Mac is starting to start in Internet Recovery, and open Disk Utility.
2. Select "Macintosh HD" (this volume belongs to your HDD) in the sidebar, and go to Restore tab.
3. From the sidebar, drag the SSD to the "Destination" box, and press Restore. When it finishes, disconnect your enclosure and restart the Mac.
If you want more information about Restore, read > http://pondini.org/OSX/DU7.html
Apart, until you purchase OS X Mountain Lion, you are using a pirated OS X version. I recommend you to purchase OS X Mountain Lion as soon as possible, so you will be able to reinstall it and you will be its owner

Similar Messages

  • HP Pavilion DV6t-3100 CTO Entertainment Notebook PC - Upgrade hard drive to SSD and windows 8?

    I want to upgrade my hard drive (WDC WD6400BEVT-60A0RT0) to SSD for faster performance AND upgrade to Windows 8. How should I proceed? Which should come first?
    I am not very knowledgeable about these things, but I have changed hard drives before -- never an SSD though. Never had BIOS problems in these changes, so never bothered with it either. No experience about that. I am practically illiterate about that part.
    What should I be careful about? Any SSD drive would work? Would BIOS (F.29) and motherboard (144A 65.38) be relevant? How should I choose my new SSD?
    Do I absolutely need to clone C: drive? Could I not install windows 8 fresh/anew? What problems may I have with a new SSD? 
    In short -- what would be the best and least problematic way to do this?
    I will back up my audio, video and office files. All copy-paste stuff. I have no problem with installing all my programs from scratch.
    I couldn't find a specific thread that provides a comprehensive answer so I opened this thread. 
    Thanks.

    It should be pretty simple _ remove the battery and adapter _ install your SSD _ hold down the power button for 1 full minute.
     Eject the DVD tray with the manual eject hole using a bent out paper clip.
     Load you W8 disc _ close the tray and plug in the adapter.
     Boot up, it should just boot to the W8 disc, if it doesn't there will be a quick flash on the screen when to press the esc key, after that you choose f9 (with out checking) and tell the BIOS to boot from the CD/DVD ROM.
     (the W8 disc will format the drive automatically)
     Get the newest SSD you can find, don't buy old junk from eBay _ always buy from a reputable dealer.
     I have Samsung SSD in my dv8 and has no problems, my old dv7 has an Intel SSD and it's been good too _ no problems. Stay away from bargain deals with obscure brand names.
     There are no official drivers posted for your machine for W8, so you can/will have to use the generic ones, but some times the HP OEM W7 drivers will work.
     Start with you Chipset driver first _ I think it's Intel _ there are no specs listed as your's is a CTO model.
     Get the Chipset driver direct from Intel _ they may have updated their auto driver finder to scan in a W8 environment.
     Install the rest of the drivers in any order. You can also use Windows update to find the drivers as well, it's up to you.
     Be aware that some things may not work in W8, like you finger print reader.
     The SSD will behave exactly the same as a standard drive, the only difference is that it will run faster.

  • Tecra R10 - Upgrade Hard drive to SSD

    Can anyone says if it's possible to change Hard disk for a SSD?
    It would be perfect!!!

    Why should it not be possible? As far as I know Toshiba offers some Portege models with SSD and with SATA HDDs.
    At the moment SSDs are pretty expensive and I think not the best solution.
    What is the reason for HDD exchange?
    I still don't have experience with SSDs but reading several articles Ive noticed that Intel X25M should be good one. According the described tests this HDD has, comparing to other manufacturers, high data transfer rate but it is pretty expensive.
    Anyway, if you exchange the HDD please let us know how it works and describe your experience with it. It can be very useful for other forum members.
    Good luck!

  • What is the best upgrade hard drive for a A1342?

    What is the best upgrade hard drive for an A1342 (white macbook)?

    Absolutely. I put a Samsung 840 in my early 2009 white macbook and it is the best computer upgrade I've ever done. I've also put an OWC SSD in my late 2009 iMac and highly recommend their drives. http://eshop.macsales.com

  • Speed up  early 2009 macbook5,2 by switching mechanical hard drive to SSD

    I am running Mavericks on an early 2009 Macbook5,2  4gb RAM CPU@2ghz Intel core 2 duo. It is running at an unacceptably slow speed. Network performance is very hopeless too. I am wondering if switching mechanical hard disk to a SSD would revive this macbook enough to keep it for a few more years. Please advise if this approach has a chance to  improve its performance adequately. If yes, what steps to follow to migrate software on my existing hard drive to SSD?

    Your Macbook has a SATA bus.
    1. This is what I recommend. Some drives which are SATA 2/3 compliant do not support SATA 1.  http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-Electronics-2-5-Inch-SATA_6_0_gb-MZ-7PD512BW/dp/B0 09NB8WTI/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1405128604&sr=8-3&keywords=samsung+840+pro
    I have used this in SATA 1 systems without any issues (the OCZ Vector is an example of problems with SATA 1).
    2. Replacing the drive can be done using these steps - https://www.ifixit.com/Guide/MacBook+Core+2+Duo+Hard+Drive+Replacement/514
    3. I suggest you use an external drive and make a Time Machine Backup of your MB, before you make any changes. If you have a Time Capsule, it can help as well (otherwise see if you can find a USB/FW external drive for backup).
    4. Once you have a good backup, replace the drive using steps in 2. Take the old drive from the MB and put it in an external SATA enclosure (preferably one that has both USB and Firewire), so it becomes your external boot disk. If you do not want a SATA enclosure, you can also consider a FW only enclosure.
    5. You can now boot from the external disk. Restore the TM backup in step 3 to the internal SSD. You will have to format the internal SSD (because it is usually unformatted). FW connectivity will allow you to daisy-chain the TM backup and your external boot drive. The restore also makes your internal drive bootable. All your applications/settings/accounts/passwords will also be preserved this way. You are essentially restoring everything from the old drive to the new drive.
    If you need help regarding TM, let me know.

  • How to migrate from internal hard drive to SSD (Solid State Drive)?

    I just bought 128GB SSD. I want to replace my internal hard drive with SSD on MacBook Pro. My internal drive has only Mac OS installed (no dual boot with Windows/Linux). Going forward I want to boot my Mac OS from SSD and use internal drive for backup purposes only. I read many forums regarding this here, but each one talks about different methods of doing it.
    * Carbon Copy Cloner for the Mac side (free)
    * Casper 6.0 for the Windows side (not free)
    * SuperDuper
    Can some one provide me with simple steps to migrate Mac OS along with my personal data from internal hard drive to SSD?

    Because Windows is not involved, you don't need Casper or anything else Windows-related.
    Use Disk Utility to repair permissions and repair the directory on your internal hard drive. Buy an external SATA hard drive enclosure* and mount your SSD in it. Connect it to the MBP and use Disk Utility to create a single GUID partition on it, formatting the partition Mac OS Extended. Use SuperDuper or Carbon Copy Cloner, it doesn't matter which, to make a bootable clone of the internal hard drive on the SSD in the external enclosure. Restart the computer holding down the Option key, and select the SSD to start up from; the purpose here is to verify that the SSD really is bootable. If that works OK, shut down, disconnect the external enclosure, and exchange the drives.
    *I recommend a FireWire 800 enclosure, but they are much more expensive than USB-only enclosures, which will work OK — USB is just slow.

  • Cannot Install Windows 8 on Y480 with 1TB hard drive + 32GB ssd

    After spending 12 hours on friday and 8 hours today doing screen share with techs from Microsoft, they have determined that Windows 8 will not install on this computer. Have tried everything from installing directly off of the hard drive, off a flash drive, off a dvd, to doing a complete clean install and nothing works.
    Completely reformatting the hard drive was also attempted but the installation could not be completed becasue the partition I was installing on was oem restricted.
    Anyone else had problems like this yet?

    Ya, I'll definately keep ya'll updated. And I'm gonna keep messing with it to see if I can get it to work fairly efficiently.
    In responce to superior, ya it'll work with pretty much any other laptop with a traditional hard drive, full ssd, or a company that updates the software on their machines for their customers when a major OS update is available. Hell, the release preview worked on my y480 through vmware. (It's definately a problem with the fact that the two drives are viewed as a single drive in 3 partitions, the main hdd, the sdd, and the backup hdd partition)
    In terms of getting a refund, you may or may not need to have a case number with Microsoft, I'm not sure, but if i pursue that path, I'll definately post something.
    If anyone is dead set on getting Win8 to work on their hybrid drive even if it isn't working completely efficiently, separate the ssd and hard drive using the Intel rapid utility so they show up as separate drives rather than separate partitions and then just install Win8 on the SSD. I'd advise you don't do this cause as I said, it entirely defeats the purpose of having a SSD since you'll need to store a majority of you data on the hard drive which isn't being accelerated with Rapid. Essentially, it would be near equivalent to having just a 5400rpm hard drive. 

  • Upgrading hard drive... need help on how to prepare current CS6 for reinstall on new hard drive

    I'm about to upgrade my hard drive to a larger one and will need to reinstall my CS6 Web/Design Suite... I've seen many people having issues with activation and licensing after they reformat their computers or buy a new one and try to install the programs on the new "system". How should I go about preparing my Adobe software on the current hard drive so I won't have any issues resintalling on the new hard drive? I will be installing CS6 Student/Teacher version on Windows 7 Pro 64-bit...
    Thanks for the help!

    Thanks!
    I wondered if that was all I needed, but when I built my new system and installed PS CS4 I kept getting errors. So, I went back to the old system and deactivated it and still got errors. Uninstalled it deactivated and still got errors on the new system. When I talked to Adobe they just kept telling me the key was invalid (even though I had been running that same program and key for the last 4 years without problems lol) and it was not a burnt copy or pirated. I had the orginal box with the original DVD case and serial number on the case... A friend of mine had upgraded their rig and went to a Suite so he gave me his CS4. But, needless to say (as it is said all over these forums apparently) Adobe was of no help at all so I had to buy a new version. I'm not looking to go through all of that BS again, haha.
    So as long as I deactivate the Suite (or do I need to deactivate each program separately?) I should be able to reformat (or upgrade hard drives) and reinstall CS6 as many times as I want? (I usually do a reformat like once a year to keep my computers clean and free of junk that may have been downloaded by other household members...)

  • Illustrator Cs5 will not open.  Recently upgraded hard Drive and upgraded to Maverick OS 10.9.3.  Where should I start troubleshooting?

    Illustrator Cs5 will not open.  Recently upgraded hard drive and upgraded to Maverick OS 10.9.3.  Where should I start troubleshooting?

    gj,
    Unless it has worked since the upgrading, I believe you should uninstall, run the Cleaner Tool, and reinstall.
    Use the CC Cleaner Tool to solve installation problems | CC, CS3-CS6

  • Does Apple Genius change my iMac hard drive to SSD?? If i already bought a ssd ??? and just take ssd and  my imac to genius and maintain my apple care??

    Does Apple Genius change my iMac hard drive to SSD?? If i already bought a ssd ??? and just take ssd and  my imac to genius and maintain my apple care??

    wouldn't it make a difference if the SSD was an Apple product?  And can't you order just the Apple SSD?  At the local Apple store many of the geniuses won't touch it if it's a third party item.

  • I have a 2008 Mac Book Pro partitioned running windows and are running out of drive space. Can I upgrade hard drive for more capacity?

    I have a 2008 Mac Book Pro partitioned running windows and are running out of drive space. Can I upgrade hard drive for more capacity? I purchased a faster drive initially, but has 200 GB capacity. I am running out of room and would like to upgrade for more space if possible.
    Can anyone suggest an alternative?

    You don't need to partition your drive to run Fusion, only if you want to run Bootcamp.
    If you have space on your Windows partition, I would suggest you backup your Windows partition, and then, delete the partition using Disk Utility.
    You can now restore your virtual machine to a single volume or repartition if you prefer.
    I would consider upgrading to a unibody MBP (used, refurbished will do) just to be able to access the HD. Opening the pre-unibody MBP is not something you would want to do.

  • Upgrading hard drive and OS - time machine suitable?

    I've been keeping regular copies of my system using time machine, but am not sure of it's overall capabilities. I am about to replace my internal hard drive (2008 macbook) and upgrade to Snow Leopard. Once this is done can I simply restore my old settings, applications, and files using time machine? Would this also include things such as my .profile file?
    Also if anyone has any advice on a good replacement hard drive then that would be super. I have the late 2008 aluminium macbook, and need something bigger than the current 230GB. I'm off to do some research now, but it can't hurt to ask here too.
    Thanks for the help,
    Nick

    Yes, the Momentus is a good drive.....You shouldn't have any issues with that one...
    I myself purchased a Seagate Momentus 5400RPM hard drive and used it for a few months until I got a nice deal on a 128GB Kingston V200 SSD.....
    Now I'm enjoying a quick Macbook Uni with 8GB of RAM and SSD upgrade.  Planning on giving it to my niece since I have a couple of late 2011 Macbook Pros.
    Good luck

  • 1TB seagate hard drive replacement - SSD instead?

    My 2009 27" iMac qualifies for the hard drive replacement programme, as I received the email from Apple and checked using their serial number submission page that mine does indeed qualify.
    I was already considering upgrading to an SSD, so now I have questions...
    Can I pay extra to have them fit an Apple certified SSD instead of the 1TB replacement drive?
    Can I pay extra and have them replace the 1TB but also fit an Apple certified SSD as the boot drive, giving me a second internal hard drive which is the replaced 1TB hard drive?  I was going to open up my iMac to see if the bracket and connections are there for a second hard drive, I have heard that they may not be present and that you also have to get a special hard drive (with an Apple factory-fitted temperature sensor) for some models, not sure if mine would be one of those models.  If I ask Apple, they might do the fitting for free at least.
    I have Lion currently installed, I have Mountain Lion too (which I got with my MacBook Pro).  They are on USB flash drives.  If I decide to send my iMac for the replacement, should I install the original OS that the iMac came with or Mountain Lion?
    What liability do Apple or an authorised service centre have as far as damage to my iMac goes?  We all know that these models had a problem with the screen backing causing a shadow, mine is not so bad but it is obviously there if I fill the screen with grey.  If they make this worse, can I take it back and demand that they fix it?  Will they be able to fix this at the same time that they replace the hard drive?  It is something I was going to look at doing myself - try to secure the screen backing, after the standard two year warranty had expired (EU), which I think it now has.  What if they scratch the casing or something else like that?  I keep all of my Apple products in pristine condition, I will notice any scratches and be deeply annoyed by them.
    With all of this in mind, I'm half-tempted to just ignore the recall and do the SSD upgrade myself, try to fix the screen backing at the same time, what do you people think?  The nearest Apple Store to me is over 100 miles away, I would have to go to a local authorised reseller / service shop.  I should probably give them a call and ask a few of my questions to them, but wanted to get an idea of what you guys knew or thought too.

    I'm pretty sure that Apple will not authorize any work other than replacing the 1 TB Seagate drive. You will not be able to pay extra for any additional work. Your choses are to have the drive replaced under the terms of the replacement program or pay out of pocket for the work you want to have done.  I had my Seagate 1TB drive replaced on site by calling AppleCare.

  • Upgrading Hard drive & RAM

    Hi, 
    I own a HP dv7-3085dx (product no : VM188UA#ABA) and I need to upgrade my hard drive to a SSD & upgrade my RAM. currenlty I'm having 500GB hdd & 6144MB DDR3 ram. 
    1. Please let me know whether Serial ATA III SSD (Samsung - 840 EVO 250GB Internal Serial ATA III Solid State Drive) is compatible with my mother board. And is it possible to use this SSD(primary) together with my old HDD(secondary). 
    2. Do i need to buy any extra cables for this upgrade?
    3. What is the transfer rate of my RAM? so i could buy a compatible RAM.
    This question was solved.
    View Solution.

    Your specific motherboard has the Intel 5 series chipset which only is capable of SATA-II. However, the SATA-III Samsung 840 Evo will work just fine and you will still see amazing speeds. You have picked a good SSD (the same one I am using so I am a bit prejudiced). 
    As for the memory, here is the crucial.com page on your model showing it will take up to 8 gb (2 x 4 gb) of DDR3-1333 SO-DIMM.
    http://www.crucial.com/store/listparts.aspx?model=Pavilion%20dv7-3085dx
    And yes, you can use 2 hard drives in any dv7. You will need a second drive caddy and cable available here:
    http://www.newmodeus.com/shop/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=2_5&products_id=222
    If this is "the Answer" please click "Accept as Solution" to help others find it. 

  • Worth upgrading Hard Drive?

    Hi All,
    Would appreciate any advice you can offer.
    I have a Mid 2009 Macbook Pro.
    Currently, I am running 8gbs of RAM and the standard 160gb Toshiba hard drive.
    For the most part, the system runs pretty well, except when my hard drive is full. Right now, I have about 20gb of hard drive free but will begin learning the Adobe Creative Suite soon so I will need additional space.
    My "Service Battery" notification is showing - though the battery lasts about 3.5 hours per charge.
    I am wondering if someone could advise whether it is worth upgrading the harddrive considering the computer's age and battery state. I am looking at 750gb WD Scorpio Black for $75.
    The processor is a 2.6 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo
    I am hoping to get another two years out of this machine
    Thank you!
    Joe

    Well, from the research I've gathered, any consumer-level SSD will blow any consumer-level HDD out of the water. But for $130, I don't think you're going to find many SSD that will match your specs. A hybrid would be nice, seeing as boot times would be much faster, and you'd still get the storage. 7200 rpm HDDs aren't to hard to find. I *think* most Macs before 2012 come with a 5400 rpm drive (like mine).
    Here's a quick Google Shopping Search I did for a 256gb SDD (around $130.) I also went ahead and found a hybrid drive for you: SSHD.
    And no problem! Glad to help.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Can anyone tell me why my Macbook pro keeps crashing

    This is the first report I've had. I was thinking it was due to me putting my iPhoto on an external drive but it still crashes when this is unplugged. I also have trouble getting back in - booted up  - often taking 3 or 4 goes!! Its been doing it for

  • How do I convert  a pdf file to excel?

    Will you help me convert a PDF File to Excel eith my new PDF Export Software?

  • AutoSuggest Error in IE

    Hi, I am cracking my head on this one, and can´t figure it out why IE is giving me a "getData().Length is null..." error on my AutoSuggest script. The pages works as it should on Firefox and Safari, but when loaded in IE the script don´t work. I´ve s

  • GetPlus + (R) Error "Installation is corrupt" 16241.202.225

    Today my Adobe Reader would not read a .pdf from my browser.  So I uninstalled Reader 9 and attempted to install Reader 9.1 and got the above error message when loading the Adobe Installation Manager.  Any thoughts?  Evan

  • Struts portlet: generating rewritten action URL inside javascript

    I'm migrating a standalone struts application written for WL 8.1 to WL 10.3 portal environment. The idea is to make a portlet out of the struts app. I've got the application almost working, url rewriting works beautifully by using *<html:link action=