

- #Accidentally installed clover on mac with windows 10 install#
- #Accidentally installed clover on mac with windows 10 drivers#
- #Accidentally installed clover on mac with windows 10 Patch#
- #Accidentally installed clover on mac with windows 10 full#
- #Accidentally installed clover on mac with windows 10 iso#
#Accidentally installed clover on mac with windows 10 install#
If you want to install OS X Yosemite, your only choice is Clover. In that case, you're probably better off downloading a bootable DMG off a 'shady' site to use in a virtual machine (not recommended so don't do it!) just to create a proper USB stick. Even if you restore the vanilla OS X Install DMG from the Apple Store, without a bootloader like Clover (recommended as Chameleon/Chimera are pretty terrible, especially for UEFI) installed on the stick itself, it won't boot on a PC. TransMac will only restore an existing image that someone has provided. You might think you've got everything working, but you really should use a DSDT. Booted from the CD, selected the USB drive from Chameleon and that's it.
#Accidentally installed clover on mac with windows 10 iso#
This is how I did it when I had no access to any Mac, I restored the OSX image to the USB stick and burned a Chameleon iso to the cd. The only downside is you need either 2 usb sticks or a usb stick and a blank CD. There's a simple way to do it from Windows, with TransMac. Vanilla way is a little harder than using a distro, but these days it's really easy to setup a hackintosh.Īnd you don't really need a real Mac for the USB stick. I never used DSDT and managed to get everything working, with only one exception, a Intel Wi-fi adapter from my HP laptop. You shouldn't attempt a Hackintosh without foreknowledge of what you're getting yourself into Honestly if you've never done a Hackintosh or don't have access to a real Mac to create a proper USB stick to install OS X, then don't bother with it.
#Accidentally installed clover on mac with windows 10 full#
using Tonymac's 'DSDT Free' install) they're completely full of utter crap. If anyone claims you don't need a DSDT for your board (e.g.
#Accidentally installed clover on mac with windows 10 drivers#
Also read up on a DSDT for your motherboard (from Rampage Dev's sites, avoid all others), getting onboard audio working using AppleHDA patching (if using the onboard - getting HDMI audio working can be a total pain in the ass), using the Nvidia web drivers which you really need to read about installing and using, getting the correct network and Wi-Fi kexts (use InsanelyMac and Rampage Dev as the resource for these), etc. Chimera, MultiBeast, UniBeast, etc.) completely unless you want to run into issues in the future by following the terrible advice, avoid those terrible distros which totally suck donkeys and bring nothing but trouble and countless issues, and read up on InsanelyMac, Rampage Dev's site and Clover's Wiki. Go the vanilla route by gaining access to a real Mac to create a proper bootable USB stick OS X installer with Clover, avoid Tonymac's site and tools (e.g. Yeah, I use Clover as my bootloader for Windows, Mac and Ubuntu on this PC. I made a USB Drive and did all the stuff i was told but when booting it will flash the apple logo then go black.
#Accidentally installed clover on mac with windows 10 Patch#
I wouldn't bother with it, it can corrupt your BIOS and there's really no point to patch I wouldn't bother with it, it can corrupt your BIOS and there's really no point to patch.ĮDIT: PMPatch is needed only to use the stock AppleIntelCpuPowerManagement kext. You'll reconnect the others after you're done.ĮDIT: PMPatch is needed only to use the stock AppleIntelCpuPowerManagement kext. But just to feel safer, unplug your hard drives and leave only the one you're installin OSX to. Oh, and about the multi-boot, don't worry, you'll have Clover bootloader and it will keep your windows installation. If you can't get to the setup, post here what errors you may have (boot with -v) and I'll try to help you further. Then save and try to boot the usb stick (or DVD). Then set the HDD to AHCI mode, disable the secure boot, disable VT-d (if you have this setting for the CPU), disable cfg-lock and set the OS type to "other os". There's no reason why it shouldn't work, but it takes time and patience if it doesn't go from the first try.Ībout the bios settings, load the optimized defaults first. I'm not saying that the custom distros have crapware in them, but you never know.Īnyway, I did a lot of hackintosh installations, but never on a MSI board. Personally, I would always choose the vanilla option, because this way you're in control of everything that gets installed. Do you want a stock (vanilla) OSX installation or are you fine with custom distro like, etc.?
