

- HOW TO MAKE A BOOTABLE USB MAC IBOOK G4 HOW TO
- HOW TO MAKE A BOOTABLE USB MAC IBOOK G4 MAC OS X
- HOW TO MAKE A BOOTABLE USB MAC IBOOK G4 DOWNLOAD

HOW TO MAKE A BOOTABLE USB MAC IBOOK G4 MAC OS X
Upon completion of the USB formatting, locate Install Mac OS X Mountain Lion.app (downloaded in step #1 to the Applications folder, by default). Click on the Options button and select the radio button for GUID Partition Table and click OK. Select Mac OS Extended (Journaled) for the format-type from the drop-down menu. Click the drop-down menu, selecting 1 partition.ĥ. Click on the USB drive from the left-hand menu and select the Partition tab.Ĥ. Insert the USB drive into the Mac and launch Disk Utility.ģ.
HOW TO MAKE A BOOTABLE USB MAC IBOOK G4 DOWNLOAD
Using a Mac with at least OS X 10.6.8 installed, access the Mac App Store and download the Lion (10.7) or Mountain Lion (10.8) app installer.Ģ.
HOW TO MAKE A BOOTABLE USB MAC IBOOK G4 HOW TO
Jesus Vigo goes over the steps to create a bootable USB to install OS X 10.7-10.8 and OS X 10.5-10.6, as well as how to put multiple versions on the same USB. Lastly, remember this system won't run the newer applications and the system is limited to Leopard (OS-X 10.5.8) and apps that can run under it.How to create a bootable USB to install OS X Just be careful on which drive you select as you don't want to over write your data on your good running Mac.įollow this Apple TN How to use and troubleshoot FireWire target disk mode.

If you have a second PowerPC system and have a FireWire cable (400 version) to connect to the other system, you could boot your iBook in Target Mode and then use your other Mac (running Leopard) to install the OS onto your iBook. A newer Intel based system can't setup the disk correctly for your PowerPC system and it will not copy the correct library files as they are different between the different CPU chip architecture (PowerPC & Intel). The problem you will face here in creating a book disk is the iBook has a PowerPC processor and you will need a PowerPC based system to setup the CD/DVD disk. From everyMac: Configured with a slot-loading 8X/24X/16X/24X DVD-ROM/CD-RW "Combo" drive. Or you will need to buy a retail version of Leopard just make sure you get the copy with CD not DVD as your optical drive will not support the newer dual layer disks. If they can't supply it (Apple technically doesn't support this model any more) see if they can at least give you the part number so you can try to find one online. You may want to give Apple support a call and see if you can still buy the required recovery disk for your iBook system. Your iBook should have an internal drive which may work if you set up the disk correctly and use the correct media. As Steve stated you can't install via an external USB optical drive.
