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Lava Lamp Freak

macrumors 68000
Jun 1, 2006
1,567
618
I am even more confused. I was able to use the recovery assistant to create Recovery USB stick, but when I boot and hold option key, it DOES NOT show up just like my "built in" recovery partition does not show up. This is really curious. Just to exclude keyboard shortcut error, I connected USB drive and rebooted again. The drive shows up but neither "buiit-in" or created usb recovery partition show up :mad:

I don't know if this would make a difference, but do you have any other USB devices/drives connected to the computer? If so, trying unhooking all USB devices and then try Command R.

Oh, and I don't see the Recovery HD with option key either, only with Command R.
 

Weaselboy

Moderator
Staff member
Jan 23, 2005
34,136
15,597
California
I am even more confused. I was able to use the recovery assistant to create Recovery USB stick, but when I boot and hold option key, it DOES NOT show up just like my "built in" recovery partition does not show up. This is really curious. Just to exclude keyboard shortcut error, I connected USB drive and rebooted again. The drive shows up but neither "buiit-in" or created usb recovery partition show up :mad:

Since you can boot from the USB key, just do that and reinstall the OS. It will DL from Apple and reinstall and hopefully recreate your Recovery HD for you. Backup just to be safe, but a straight reinstall like this will not erase your data.

A normal Lion/Mountain Lion install will recreate a missing Recovery HD.
 

Latino4Me

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Nov 16, 2003
29
0
Thanks guys!
It finally worked! I finally have a recovery option. It is internet recovery. I followed the instructions to download the special Mountain Lion build that came with my iMac, as it was suggested here:

You can get it by following this process.

Then, I created the boot USB stick with it and booted by pressing ALT/OPT. Reformatted the drive, installed the Mountain Lion and now I can get recovery boot by pressing CMD+R (option key does not work, as confirmed here below)

Oh, and I don't see the Recovery HD with option key either, only with Command R.

The recovery is the Internet recovery type. Is that what you get?
 

Weaselboy

Moderator
Staff member
Jan 23, 2005
34,136
15,597
California
Then, I created the boot USB stick with it and booted by pressing ALT/OPT. Reformatted the drive, installed the Mountain Lion and now I can get recovery boot by pressing CMD+R (option key does not work, as confirmed here below)

Glad it worked out. :)

command-option-r is supposed to access Internet recovery, bypassing the Recovery HD on the drive, but form some reason it does not seem to always work.
 

MagicThief83

macrumors 6502
Jun 12, 2012
478
0
NYC
I think an easier process would be to download mountain lion (if purchased) and then burn the install image file to USB (I believe it's an EMG file?), so that way you have a full USB installer where you do not have to wait on a re-download in order to install the OS.

----------

I think an easier process would be to download mountain lion (if purchased) and then burn the install image file to USB (I believe it's an EMG file?), so that way you have a full USB installer where you do not have to wait on a re-download in order to install the OS.

Sorry it's called "installESD.dmg" and that is the file you burn to USB using disk utility. You can find the file by exploring the contents of the mountain lion install package.
 

iWaiting

macrumors regular
Dec 10, 2012
132
0
At this time the software on a new iMac is not the same build as the one in the app store
 

Lava Lamp Freak

macrumors 68000
Jun 1, 2006
1,567
618
I don't know if this would make a difference, but do you have any other USB devices/drives connected to the computer? If so, trying unhooking all USB devices and then try Command R.

Oh, and I don't see the Recovery HD with option key either, only with Command R.

I tested my iMac tonight and it will not show the boot menu or boot into recovery mode with an external USB drive or thumb drive connected. If I have one connected, it ignores any keys I'm holding down at startup. That includes the USB Recovery stick I made using the Apple tool.

The only way I can boot from an external drive is to select it as the Startup Disk in System Preferences.

Update: If I wait to connect a USB drive until after I get to the boot menu by holding down Option, then the external drive will show up and I can boot from it.
 
Last edited:

SimplyMac2012

macrumors member
Nov 26, 2012
39
0
Hitchin , Hertfordshire , UK
Ok so i have the new build Macbook Pro 2012 i7

Ok so i have the new build Macbook Pro 2012 i7 and do i guess OSX 10.8 doesn't come with Recovery Partition Just the internet recovery.

Is this right or do i need to completely wipe the drive download the current version of OSX 10.8.2 from the internet recovery. Will this put the recovery partition back on the drive like it did with Lion ??

regards

Adam
 

Weaselboy

Moderator
Staff member
Jan 23, 2005
34,136
15,597
California
Ok so i have the new build Macbook Pro 2012 i7 and do i guess OSX 10.8 doesn't come with Recovery Partition Just the internet recovery.

Is this right or do i need to completely wipe the drive download the current version of OSX 10.8.2 from the internet recovery. Will this put the recovery partition back on the drive like it did with Lion ??

regards

Adam

You machine will come with a Recovery HD partition. Go to Terminal and type in "diskutil list" (without the quotes) and you will see it.
 

apphi

macrumors newbie
Mar 7, 2013
1
0
iMac Fusion Drive

You can't reinstall the OS from any other recovery partition than the one that shipped with the fusion drive. The build for the Disk Utility etc is different for the new iMacs and older versions will not work.
 

Fishrrman

macrumors Penryn
Feb 20, 2009
28,340
12,458
Create a bootable cloned backup using either CarbonCopyCloner or SuperDuper, and you will have no real need for a "recovery partition" -- because your BACKUP will become your "recovery" partition.

The recovery partition limits you to a few procedures.
A fully-cloned backup lets you do any of those, and much more.
 

Hakiroto

macrumors 6502a
Jul 8, 2011
641
221
At this time the software on a new iMac is not the same build as the one in the app store

Ah, this is interesting. Do you have a link to anywhere that explains this a little more? I presume you mean the build of OS X is different, right? I don't need to format my iMac as it's brand new but out of curiously, what would happen if I formatted the HD completely and reinstalled Mountain Lion from a USB installer that I created (using the latest in the Mac App Store)?
 

ZMacintosh

macrumors 65816
Nov 13, 2008
1,445
684
do you have a fusion drive? if so, there is no recovery partition on the drives. only internet recovery or the Recovery application process
 

Weaselboy

Moderator
Staff member
Jan 23, 2005
34,136
15,597
California
but not accessible by standard methods or usable in that regard.

http://support.apple.com/kb/ht5446

Yes it is. Recovery works exactly the same on a Fusion drive as it does a regular drive. The article you linked is showing how a Fusion drive will roll over to Internet recovery if the drive cannot be accessed (flashing question mark). That has nothing to do with accessing and using the normal Recovery HD partition from the drive.
 

mlsusa

macrumors regular
Sep 17, 2012
205
85
Yep... you new iMac uses a special build of 10.8.2. You can get it by following this process. Then use the DMG file you downloaded with this free app to make your USB installer.

Great stuff. I'm going to sell my old iMac and was going to use go the recovery-HD-on-USB route to wipe and rebuild the drive. This will be better since I'll already have the installer so no need to hook up the old machine to the internet to download the installer to complete the rebuild.

For those who don't want to deal with downloading an extra app you can go the hard way and use Disk Utility to make the bootable install USB installer (it wasn't actually that difficult):
http://blogchampion.com/2011/03/12/...rive-installer-from-a-dmg-package-in-mac-os-x
http://arstechnica.com/apple/2012/07/how-to-create-a-bootable-backup-mountain-lion-install-disk/
http://appducate.com/2012/12/install-os-x-mountain-lion-from-usb-flash-drive/
 
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