Mac Pro install disk keeps ejecting itself2nd hand iMac with no OSCan I use the Mac OS X Install DVD that came with my Mac Mini on my Macbook?Ejecting CD from Mac after fresh install?How to make a Lion install disk for a Mac Mini from a Mac ProHow to install Snow Leopard from USB where USB disk is prepared using Linux?Creating boot disk for Windows 7 on MacBook ProCan't start up MacBook Pro from OS X install discsMac Book Air mid-2012 completely disappeared diskHelp partitioning “free space” with utility diskGrey screen apple logo prohibitory sign etc MacBook 2009Mac Pro 5.1 Windows 10 EFI Boot (Separate Drive)

Is it possible to determine the symmetric encryption method used by output size?

Pulling the rope with one hand is as heavy as with two hands?

Error message with tabularx

How to solve constants out of the internal energy equation?

Examples of non trivial equivalence relations , I mean equivalence relations without the expression " same ... as" in their definition?

How to pronounce 'C++' in Spanish

how to find the equation of a circle given points of the circle

With a Canadian student visa, can I spend a night at Vancouver before continuing to Toronto?

How do I deal with a coworker that keeps asking to make small superficial changes to a report, and it is seriously triggering my anxiety?

Seemingly unused edef prior to an ifx mysteriously affects the outcome of the ifx. Why?

Are Boeing 737-800’s grounded?

Why does processed meat contain preservatives, while canned fish needs not?

Was there a shared-world project before "Thieves World"?

What does the "ep" capability mean?

What is the difference between `command a[bc]d` and `command `ab,cd`

What is the most expensive material in the world that could be used to create Pun-Pun's lute?

Document starts having heaps of errors in the middle, but the code doesn't have any problems in it

In order to check if a field is required or not, is the result of isNillable method sufficient?

Why does academia still use scientific journals and not peer-reviewed government funded alternatives?

Size of electromagnet needed to replicate Earth's magnetic field

Exchange,swap or switch

What does it mean to express a gate in Dirac notation?

Why isn't the definition of absolute value applied when squaring a radical containing a variable?

Why do games have consumables?



Mac Pro install disk keeps ejecting itself


2nd hand iMac with no OSCan I use the Mac OS X Install DVD that came with my Mac Mini on my Macbook?Ejecting CD from Mac after fresh install?How to make a Lion install disk for a Mac Mini from a Mac ProHow to install Snow Leopard from USB where USB disk is prepared using Linux?Creating boot disk for Windows 7 on MacBook ProCan't start up MacBook Pro from OS X install discsMac Book Air mid-2012 completely disappeared diskHelp partitioning “free space” with utility diskGrey screen apple logo prohibitory sign etc MacBook 2009Mac Pro 5.1 Windows 10 EFI Boot (Separate Drive)






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








2















I am not that savvy with Macintosh computers so I can't figure out why the install disk keeps ejecting when I attempt to boot from disk by holding down the "C" button or the option button.



It is not the optical drive as I was able to boot into Linux using a live CD.



While in Linux I formatted the hard drive I want to install the OS onto as HFS+ and had no problems.



I think I may be using the wrong installation disk since I can't confirm this disk belongs to this machine.



The disc reads:



MAC PRO

MAC OS X INSTALL DVD

VERSION 10.6.2

DISC VERSION 1.0

2009 APPLE INC.



Computer identifies as:



A1186 MAC PRO 2.66QX/2X512/7300GT



How can I determine if this is the right disc and/or which is the latest retail disk I can use on this machine?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Nevermind Susan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Hi and welcome. Can you edit the post to explain which Mac Pro you have? Or do you just need the apple search that shows which version of OS ships with which computer? Apple support will always get you that information for free in my experience - quick chat giving them the serial numbver, they’ll help you determine media to reload it properly

    – bmike
    2 hours ago











  • I wouldn't know how to further identify the Mac Pro that I have other than what I posted in the original question. I am trying to install OS X and the disc keeps ejecting

    – Nevermind Susan
    2 hours ago

















2















I am not that savvy with Macintosh computers so I can't figure out why the install disk keeps ejecting when I attempt to boot from disk by holding down the "C" button or the option button.



It is not the optical drive as I was able to boot into Linux using a live CD.



While in Linux I formatted the hard drive I want to install the OS onto as HFS+ and had no problems.



I think I may be using the wrong installation disk since I can't confirm this disk belongs to this machine.



The disc reads:



MAC PRO

MAC OS X INSTALL DVD

VERSION 10.6.2

DISC VERSION 1.0

2009 APPLE INC.



Computer identifies as:



A1186 MAC PRO 2.66QX/2X512/7300GT



How can I determine if this is the right disc and/or which is the latest retail disk I can use on this machine?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Nevermind Susan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Hi and welcome. Can you edit the post to explain which Mac Pro you have? Or do you just need the apple search that shows which version of OS ships with which computer? Apple support will always get you that information for free in my experience - quick chat giving them the serial numbver, they’ll help you determine media to reload it properly

    – bmike
    2 hours ago











  • I wouldn't know how to further identify the Mac Pro that I have other than what I posted in the original question. I am trying to install OS X and the disc keeps ejecting

    – Nevermind Susan
    2 hours ago













2












2








2








I am not that savvy with Macintosh computers so I can't figure out why the install disk keeps ejecting when I attempt to boot from disk by holding down the "C" button or the option button.



It is not the optical drive as I was able to boot into Linux using a live CD.



While in Linux I formatted the hard drive I want to install the OS onto as HFS+ and had no problems.



I think I may be using the wrong installation disk since I can't confirm this disk belongs to this machine.



The disc reads:



MAC PRO

MAC OS X INSTALL DVD

VERSION 10.6.2

DISC VERSION 1.0

2009 APPLE INC.



Computer identifies as:



A1186 MAC PRO 2.66QX/2X512/7300GT



How can I determine if this is the right disc and/or which is the latest retail disk I can use on this machine?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Nevermind Susan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I am not that savvy with Macintosh computers so I can't figure out why the install disk keeps ejecting when I attempt to boot from disk by holding down the "C" button or the option button.



It is not the optical drive as I was able to boot into Linux using a live CD.



While in Linux I formatted the hard drive I want to install the OS onto as HFS+ and had no problems.



I think I may be using the wrong installation disk since I can't confirm this disk belongs to this machine.



The disc reads:



MAC PRO

MAC OS X INSTALL DVD

VERSION 10.6.2

DISC VERSION 1.0

2009 APPLE INC.



Computer identifies as:



A1186 MAC PRO 2.66QX/2X512/7300GT



How can I determine if this is the right disc and/or which is the latest retail disk I can use on this machine?







hard-drive bootcamp disk-utility boot install






share|improve this question









New contributor




Nevermind Susan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Nevermind Susan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 3 mins ago









Laurel

1957




1957






New contributor




Nevermind Susan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 2 hours ago









Nevermind SusanNevermind Susan

111




111




New contributor




Nevermind Susan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Nevermind Susan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Nevermind Susan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • Hi and welcome. Can you edit the post to explain which Mac Pro you have? Or do you just need the apple search that shows which version of OS ships with which computer? Apple support will always get you that information for free in my experience - quick chat giving them the serial numbver, they’ll help you determine media to reload it properly

    – bmike
    2 hours ago











  • I wouldn't know how to further identify the Mac Pro that I have other than what I posted in the original question. I am trying to install OS X and the disc keeps ejecting

    – Nevermind Susan
    2 hours ago

















  • Hi and welcome. Can you edit the post to explain which Mac Pro you have? Or do you just need the apple search that shows which version of OS ships with which computer? Apple support will always get you that information for free in my experience - quick chat giving them the serial numbver, they’ll help you determine media to reload it properly

    – bmike
    2 hours ago











  • I wouldn't know how to further identify the Mac Pro that I have other than what I posted in the original question. I am trying to install OS X and the disc keeps ejecting

    – Nevermind Susan
    2 hours ago
















Hi and welcome. Can you edit the post to explain which Mac Pro you have? Or do you just need the apple search that shows which version of OS ships with which computer? Apple support will always get you that information for free in my experience - quick chat giving them the serial numbver, they’ll help you determine media to reload it properly

– bmike
2 hours ago





Hi and welcome. Can you edit the post to explain which Mac Pro you have? Or do you just need the apple search that shows which version of OS ships with which computer? Apple support will always get you that information for free in my experience - quick chat giving them the serial numbver, they’ll help you determine media to reload it properly

– bmike
2 hours ago













I wouldn't know how to further identify the Mac Pro that I have other than what I posted in the original question. I am trying to install OS X and the disc keeps ejecting

– Nevermind Susan
2 hours ago





I wouldn't know how to further identify the Mac Pro that I have other than what I posted in the original question. I am trying to install OS X and the disc keeps ejecting

– Nevermind Susan
2 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















2














I would guess 10.6.2 would be just fine to boot most MacPro with that model, so you might have a hardware issue or bad DVD.



More specifically, there are 8 models with A1186 - so you might need to try OS between 10.4 but most of them would work with 10.6.8 - so I’d start with any 10.6 media you can get your hands on if you can’t get a serial number or more precise handle on which hardware you have.



  • https://everymac.com/ultimate-mac-lookup/?search_keywords=a1186

Even easier would be to get an external drive with 10.6.8 installed on it from hardware where the drive isn’t possibly broken and then hold the option key to get this mac to boot to an external drive rather than fussing with the optical drive and uncertainty on which media would boot this without an OS.



From there, you could get at the serial number or details on the exact model you have.



Apple will ship you the exact media you need (at a cost) so worst case, you can go that route with Apple Support if you’re unable to resolve this here or on the internet in general.






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    I agree with bmike, 10.6.2 should install - but in this case the DVD you have was bundled with a 2009 Mac Pro (not the one you're asking about) and won't boot your machine. What you would need is a retail version of Snow Leopard (i.e. 10.6.x). Other versions that will work on this Mac Pro include retail versions from 10.4.7 to 10.7.5 (but any version of 10.7.x requires that at least 10.6.6 is already installed), so you're better off looking for a retail version of Snow Leopard to get the Mac Pro going again.

    – Monomeeth
    29 mins ago







  • 1





    As for which version actually came bundled with your machine, it depends on when it was manufactured. At various stages it came pre-installed with 10.4.7, 10.4.8, 10.4.9, 10.4.10 and finally with 10.5. So if you find a Mac Pro DVD of one of these, you're set.

    – Monomeeth
    25 mins ago


















2














According to everyman.com your Mac is a 2006 model which was discontinued January 8, 2008. (I made the assumption 2.66QX means 2.66 GHz Quad Core Xeon) This model originally was designed to run OS X 10.4.7. Since the
Mac OS X v10.6.2 Update is dated Nov 9, 2009, I doubt the disc you have is the correct one for this model Mac.



The OS X 10.7.5 (Lion) was the last version designed for your Mac model.




Note: Since this model has a 32 bit EFI, you can only run 32 bit EFI booting operation systems. However, you may be able to run 64 bit BIOS booting operating systems such as Windows and some versions of Linux.




If you were to purchase Lion from Apple, then a requirement to install would be to have Snow Leopard already installed. In other words, the DMG file only offers an upgrade to Lion. You probably can not use the DMG file to create a bootable installer. You can read the requirements from the Apple Lion website given in the above link.



You would not need a Apple ID to install Snow Leopard, but the installer will still ask. You can decline to give an Apple ID if you wish. Snow Leopard was released on a DL DVD. Apple still sells Snow Leopard DVDs, but you can also download an ISO from the internet. There are plenty of websites that explain how to make a bootable USB Snow Leopard installer. I have not tried any of these methods. If you succeed, then maybe you could post a method that works.




I would recommend burning the Snow Leopard ISO file to a DL DVD.




Once you have Snow Leopard installed, you should install all the available Snow Leopard updates. This would update Snow Leopard to OS X 10.6.8. From here, you could upgrade to Lion by using a purchased DMG file.






share|improve this answer
































    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    2














    I would guess 10.6.2 would be just fine to boot most MacPro with that model, so you might have a hardware issue or bad DVD.



    More specifically, there are 8 models with A1186 - so you might need to try OS between 10.4 but most of them would work with 10.6.8 - so I’d start with any 10.6 media you can get your hands on if you can’t get a serial number or more precise handle on which hardware you have.



    • https://everymac.com/ultimate-mac-lookup/?search_keywords=a1186

    Even easier would be to get an external drive with 10.6.8 installed on it from hardware where the drive isn’t possibly broken and then hold the option key to get this mac to boot to an external drive rather than fussing with the optical drive and uncertainty on which media would boot this without an OS.



    From there, you could get at the serial number or details on the exact model you have.



    Apple will ship you the exact media you need (at a cost) so worst case, you can go that route with Apple Support if you’re unable to resolve this here or on the internet in general.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 1





      I agree with bmike, 10.6.2 should install - but in this case the DVD you have was bundled with a 2009 Mac Pro (not the one you're asking about) and won't boot your machine. What you would need is a retail version of Snow Leopard (i.e. 10.6.x). Other versions that will work on this Mac Pro include retail versions from 10.4.7 to 10.7.5 (but any version of 10.7.x requires that at least 10.6.6 is already installed), so you're better off looking for a retail version of Snow Leopard to get the Mac Pro going again.

      – Monomeeth
      29 mins ago







    • 1





      As for which version actually came bundled with your machine, it depends on when it was manufactured. At various stages it came pre-installed with 10.4.7, 10.4.8, 10.4.9, 10.4.10 and finally with 10.5. So if you find a Mac Pro DVD of one of these, you're set.

      – Monomeeth
      25 mins ago















    2














    I would guess 10.6.2 would be just fine to boot most MacPro with that model, so you might have a hardware issue or bad DVD.



    More specifically, there are 8 models with A1186 - so you might need to try OS between 10.4 but most of them would work with 10.6.8 - so I’d start with any 10.6 media you can get your hands on if you can’t get a serial number or more precise handle on which hardware you have.



    • https://everymac.com/ultimate-mac-lookup/?search_keywords=a1186

    Even easier would be to get an external drive with 10.6.8 installed on it from hardware where the drive isn’t possibly broken and then hold the option key to get this mac to boot to an external drive rather than fussing with the optical drive and uncertainty on which media would boot this without an OS.



    From there, you could get at the serial number or details on the exact model you have.



    Apple will ship you the exact media you need (at a cost) so worst case, you can go that route with Apple Support if you’re unable to resolve this here or on the internet in general.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 1





      I agree with bmike, 10.6.2 should install - but in this case the DVD you have was bundled with a 2009 Mac Pro (not the one you're asking about) and won't boot your machine. What you would need is a retail version of Snow Leopard (i.e. 10.6.x). Other versions that will work on this Mac Pro include retail versions from 10.4.7 to 10.7.5 (but any version of 10.7.x requires that at least 10.6.6 is already installed), so you're better off looking for a retail version of Snow Leopard to get the Mac Pro going again.

      – Monomeeth
      29 mins ago







    • 1





      As for which version actually came bundled with your machine, it depends on when it was manufactured. At various stages it came pre-installed with 10.4.7, 10.4.8, 10.4.9, 10.4.10 and finally with 10.5. So if you find a Mac Pro DVD of one of these, you're set.

      – Monomeeth
      25 mins ago













    2












    2








    2







    I would guess 10.6.2 would be just fine to boot most MacPro with that model, so you might have a hardware issue or bad DVD.



    More specifically, there are 8 models with A1186 - so you might need to try OS between 10.4 but most of them would work with 10.6.8 - so I’d start with any 10.6 media you can get your hands on if you can’t get a serial number or more precise handle on which hardware you have.



    • https://everymac.com/ultimate-mac-lookup/?search_keywords=a1186

    Even easier would be to get an external drive with 10.6.8 installed on it from hardware where the drive isn’t possibly broken and then hold the option key to get this mac to boot to an external drive rather than fussing with the optical drive and uncertainty on which media would boot this without an OS.



    From there, you could get at the serial number or details on the exact model you have.



    Apple will ship you the exact media you need (at a cost) so worst case, you can go that route with Apple Support if you’re unable to resolve this here or on the internet in general.






    share|improve this answer













    I would guess 10.6.2 would be just fine to boot most MacPro with that model, so you might have a hardware issue or bad DVD.



    More specifically, there are 8 models with A1186 - so you might need to try OS between 10.4 but most of them would work with 10.6.8 - so I’d start with any 10.6 media you can get your hands on if you can’t get a serial number or more precise handle on which hardware you have.



    • https://everymac.com/ultimate-mac-lookup/?search_keywords=a1186

    Even easier would be to get an external drive with 10.6.8 installed on it from hardware where the drive isn’t possibly broken and then hold the option key to get this mac to boot to an external drive rather than fussing with the optical drive and uncertainty on which media would boot this without an OS.



    From there, you could get at the serial number or details on the exact model you have.



    Apple will ship you the exact media you need (at a cost) so worst case, you can go that route with Apple Support if you’re unable to resolve this here or on the internet in general.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 1 hour ago









    bmikebmike

    163k46293634




    163k46293634







    • 1





      I agree with bmike, 10.6.2 should install - but in this case the DVD you have was bundled with a 2009 Mac Pro (not the one you're asking about) and won't boot your machine. What you would need is a retail version of Snow Leopard (i.e. 10.6.x). Other versions that will work on this Mac Pro include retail versions from 10.4.7 to 10.7.5 (but any version of 10.7.x requires that at least 10.6.6 is already installed), so you're better off looking for a retail version of Snow Leopard to get the Mac Pro going again.

      – Monomeeth
      29 mins ago







    • 1





      As for which version actually came bundled with your machine, it depends on when it was manufactured. At various stages it came pre-installed with 10.4.7, 10.4.8, 10.4.9, 10.4.10 and finally with 10.5. So if you find a Mac Pro DVD of one of these, you're set.

      – Monomeeth
      25 mins ago












    • 1





      I agree with bmike, 10.6.2 should install - but in this case the DVD you have was bundled with a 2009 Mac Pro (not the one you're asking about) and won't boot your machine. What you would need is a retail version of Snow Leopard (i.e. 10.6.x). Other versions that will work on this Mac Pro include retail versions from 10.4.7 to 10.7.5 (but any version of 10.7.x requires that at least 10.6.6 is already installed), so you're better off looking for a retail version of Snow Leopard to get the Mac Pro going again.

      – Monomeeth
      29 mins ago







    • 1





      As for which version actually came bundled with your machine, it depends on when it was manufactured. At various stages it came pre-installed with 10.4.7, 10.4.8, 10.4.9, 10.4.10 and finally with 10.5. So if you find a Mac Pro DVD of one of these, you're set.

      – Monomeeth
      25 mins ago







    1




    1





    I agree with bmike, 10.6.2 should install - but in this case the DVD you have was bundled with a 2009 Mac Pro (not the one you're asking about) and won't boot your machine. What you would need is a retail version of Snow Leopard (i.e. 10.6.x). Other versions that will work on this Mac Pro include retail versions from 10.4.7 to 10.7.5 (but any version of 10.7.x requires that at least 10.6.6 is already installed), so you're better off looking for a retail version of Snow Leopard to get the Mac Pro going again.

    – Monomeeth
    29 mins ago






    I agree with bmike, 10.6.2 should install - but in this case the DVD you have was bundled with a 2009 Mac Pro (not the one you're asking about) and won't boot your machine. What you would need is a retail version of Snow Leopard (i.e. 10.6.x). Other versions that will work on this Mac Pro include retail versions from 10.4.7 to 10.7.5 (but any version of 10.7.x requires that at least 10.6.6 is already installed), so you're better off looking for a retail version of Snow Leopard to get the Mac Pro going again.

    – Monomeeth
    29 mins ago





    1




    1





    As for which version actually came bundled with your machine, it depends on when it was manufactured. At various stages it came pre-installed with 10.4.7, 10.4.8, 10.4.9, 10.4.10 and finally with 10.5. So if you find a Mac Pro DVD of one of these, you're set.

    – Monomeeth
    25 mins ago





    As for which version actually came bundled with your machine, it depends on when it was manufactured. At various stages it came pre-installed with 10.4.7, 10.4.8, 10.4.9, 10.4.10 and finally with 10.5. So if you find a Mac Pro DVD of one of these, you're set.

    – Monomeeth
    25 mins ago













    2














    According to everyman.com your Mac is a 2006 model which was discontinued January 8, 2008. (I made the assumption 2.66QX means 2.66 GHz Quad Core Xeon) This model originally was designed to run OS X 10.4.7. Since the
    Mac OS X v10.6.2 Update is dated Nov 9, 2009, I doubt the disc you have is the correct one for this model Mac.



    The OS X 10.7.5 (Lion) was the last version designed for your Mac model.




    Note: Since this model has a 32 bit EFI, you can only run 32 bit EFI booting operation systems. However, you may be able to run 64 bit BIOS booting operating systems such as Windows and some versions of Linux.




    If you were to purchase Lion from Apple, then a requirement to install would be to have Snow Leopard already installed. In other words, the DMG file only offers an upgrade to Lion. You probably can not use the DMG file to create a bootable installer. You can read the requirements from the Apple Lion website given in the above link.



    You would not need a Apple ID to install Snow Leopard, but the installer will still ask. You can decline to give an Apple ID if you wish. Snow Leopard was released on a DL DVD. Apple still sells Snow Leopard DVDs, but you can also download an ISO from the internet. There are plenty of websites that explain how to make a bootable USB Snow Leopard installer. I have not tried any of these methods. If you succeed, then maybe you could post a method that works.




    I would recommend burning the Snow Leopard ISO file to a DL DVD.




    Once you have Snow Leopard installed, you should install all the available Snow Leopard updates. This would update Snow Leopard to OS X 10.6.8. From here, you could upgrade to Lion by using a purchased DMG file.






    share|improve this answer





























      2














      According to everyman.com your Mac is a 2006 model which was discontinued January 8, 2008. (I made the assumption 2.66QX means 2.66 GHz Quad Core Xeon) This model originally was designed to run OS X 10.4.7. Since the
      Mac OS X v10.6.2 Update is dated Nov 9, 2009, I doubt the disc you have is the correct one for this model Mac.



      The OS X 10.7.5 (Lion) was the last version designed for your Mac model.




      Note: Since this model has a 32 bit EFI, you can only run 32 bit EFI booting operation systems. However, you may be able to run 64 bit BIOS booting operating systems such as Windows and some versions of Linux.




      If you were to purchase Lion from Apple, then a requirement to install would be to have Snow Leopard already installed. In other words, the DMG file only offers an upgrade to Lion. You probably can not use the DMG file to create a bootable installer. You can read the requirements from the Apple Lion website given in the above link.



      You would not need a Apple ID to install Snow Leopard, but the installer will still ask. You can decline to give an Apple ID if you wish. Snow Leopard was released on a DL DVD. Apple still sells Snow Leopard DVDs, but you can also download an ISO from the internet. There are plenty of websites that explain how to make a bootable USB Snow Leopard installer. I have not tried any of these methods. If you succeed, then maybe you could post a method that works.




      I would recommend burning the Snow Leopard ISO file to a DL DVD.




      Once you have Snow Leopard installed, you should install all the available Snow Leopard updates. This would update Snow Leopard to OS X 10.6.8. From here, you could upgrade to Lion by using a purchased DMG file.






      share|improve this answer



























        2












        2








        2







        According to everyman.com your Mac is a 2006 model which was discontinued January 8, 2008. (I made the assumption 2.66QX means 2.66 GHz Quad Core Xeon) This model originally was designed to run OS X 10.4.7. Since the
        Mac OS X v10.6.2 Update is dated Nov 9, 2009, I doubt the disc you have is the correct one for this model Mac.



        The OS X 10.7.5 (Lion) was the last version designed for your Mac model.




        Note: Since this model has a 32 bit EFI, you can only run 32 bit EFI booting operation systems. However, you may be able to run 64 bit BIOS booting operating systems such as Windows and some versions of Linux.




        If you were to purchase Lion from Apple, then a requirement to install would be to have Snow Leopard already installed. In other words, the DMG file only offers an upgrade to Lion. You probably can not use the DMG file to create a bootable installer. You can read the requirements from the Apple Lion website given in the above link.



        You would not need a Apple ID to install Snow Leopard, but the installer will still ask. You can decline to give an Apple ID if you wish. Snow Leopard was released on a DL DVD. Apple still sells Snow Leopard DVDs, but you can also download an ISO from the internet. There are plenty of websites that explain how to make a bootable USB Snow Leopard installer. I have not tried any of these methods. If you succeed, then maybe you could post a method that works.




        I would recommend burning the Snow Leopard ISO file to a DL DVD.




        Once you have Snow Leopard installed, you should install all the available Snow Leopard updates. This would update Snow Leopard to OS X 10.6.8. From here, you could upgrade to Lion by using a purchased DMG file.






        share|improve this answer















        According to everyman.com your Mac is a 2006 model which was discontinued January 8, 2008. (I made the assumption 2.66QX means 2.66 GHz Quad Core Xeon) This model originally was designed to run OS X 10.4.7. Since the
        Mac OS X v10.6.2 Update is dated Nov 9, 2009, I doubt the disc you have is the correct one for this model Mac.



        The OS X 10.7.5 (Lion) was the last version designed for your Mac model.




        Note: Since this model has a 32 bit EFI, you can only run 32 bit EFI booting operation systems. However, you may be able to run 64 bit BIOS booting operating systems such as Windows and some versions of Linux.




        If you were to purchase Lion from Apple, then a requirement to install would be to have Snow Leopard already installed. In other words, the DMG file only offers an upgrade to Lion. You probably can not use the DMG file to create a bootable installer. You can read the requirements from the Apple Lion website given in the above link.



        You would not need a Apple ID to install Snow Leopard, but the installer will still ask. You can decline to give an Apple ID if you wish. Snow Leopard was released on a DL DVD. Apple still sells Snow Leopard DVDs, but you can also download an ISO from the internet. There are plenty of websites that explain how to make a bootable USB Snow Leopard installer. I have not tried any of these methods. If you succeed, then maybe you could post a method that works.




        I would recommend burning the Snow Leopard ISO file to a DL DVD.




        Once you have Snow Leopard installed, you should install all the available Snow Leopard updates. This would update Snow Leopard to OS X 10.6.8. From here, you could upgrade to Lion by using a purchased DMG file.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 30 mins ago

























        answered 1 hour ago









        David AndersonDavid Anderson

        14.8k51846




        14.8k51846













            Popular posts from this blog

            Are there any AGPL-style licences that require source code modifications to be public? Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern) Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?Force derivative works to be publicAre there any GPL like licenses for Apple App Store?Do you violate the GPL if you provide source code that cannot be compiled?GPL - is it distribution to use libraries in an appliance loaned to customers?Distributing App for free which uses GPL'ed codeModifications of server software under GPL, with web/CLI interfaceDoes using an AGPLv3-licensed library prevent me from dual-licensing my own source code?Can I publish only select code under GPLv3 from a private project?Is there published precedent regarding the scope of covered work that uses AGPL software?If MIT licensed code links to GPL licensed code what should be the license of the resulting binary program?If I use a public API endpoint that has its source code licensed under AGPL in my app, do I need to disclose my source?

            2013 GY136 Descoberta | Órbita | Referências Menu de navegação«List Of Centaurs and Scattered-Disk Objects»«List of Known Trans-Neptunian Objects»

            Button changing it's text & action. Good or terrible? The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are Inchanging text on user mouseoverShould certain functions be “hard to find” for powerusers to discover?Custom liking function - do I need user login?Using different checkbox style for different checkbox behaviorBest Practices: Save and Exit in Software UIInteraction with remote validated formMore efficient UI to progress the user through a complicated process?Designing a popup notice for a gameShould bulk-editing functions be hidden until a table row is selected, or is there a better solution?Is it bad practice to disable (replace) the context menu?