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Apple Computing Products:
macOS - Operating System
Help on how to fix macbook pro 13inch 2010 (cpu 1 caller 0x47f5ad)?
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<blockquote data-quote="bobtomay" data-source="post: 1531031" data-attributes="member: 24160"><p>Booted to your SL disk and gone into Disk Utility and found the drive is not seen?</p><p></p><p>Way, way, way past time to buy a new hard drive - whether that one has failed or not.</p><p>There's no doubt in my mind that both OS X and Windows were already running like crap with only 3% free space. And that's probably the last time you checked - no telling what the actual current free space is. A full drive typically is not going to boot either, but it would be seen by Disk Utility.</p><p></p><p>Replace the internal drive and get OS X installed.</p><p>Get either an external case to put the old drive in or a universal USB adapter or caddy to connect the old drive externally to see if you can recover any data from it.</p><p>Or a restore from your backup.</p><p></p><p><strong>****NOTE for others: ****</strong> While our drives have gotten larger and with 1-2-3-4 TB drives we're using now - Rule of thumb - Never run a defrag program on a drive with less than 10% free space - you are only asking for trouble.</p><p></p><p>PS: And no, the temps you provided should not be an issue.</p><p></p><p>PPS: You don't really think we're going to go check out all those links do you?</p><p></p><p>PPPS: Don't want to spend the cash on a drive without discovering if there is some other system board problem with your machine - take it to Apple and have them run a diagnostics on it or with your original disks you can run the <a href="http://support.apple.com/kb/ht1509" target="_blank">Apple Hardware test</a>.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="bobtomay, post: 1531031, member: 24160"] Booted to your SL disk and gone into Disk Utility and found the drive is not seen? Way, way, way past time to buy a new hard drive - whether that one has failed or not. There's no doubt in my mind that both OS X and Windows were already running like crap with only 3% free space. And that's probably the last time you checked - no telling what the actual current free space is. A full drive typically is not going to boot either, but it would be seen by Disk Utility. Replace the internal drive and get OS X installed. Get either an external case to put the old drive in or a universal USB adapter or caddy to connect the old drive externally to see if you can recover any data from it. Or a restore from your backup. [B]****NOTE for others: ****[/B] While our drives have gotten larger and with 1-2-3-4 TB drives we're using now - Rule of thumb - Never run a defrag program on a drive with less than 10% free space - you are only asking for trouble. PS: And no, the temps you provided should not be an issue. PPS: You don't really think we're going to go check out all those links do you? PPPS: Don't want to spend the cash on a drive without discovering if there is some other system board problem with your machine - take it to Apple and have them run a diagnostics on it or with your original disks you can run the [URL="http://support.apple.com/kb/ht1509"]Apple Hardware test[/URL]. [/QUOTE]
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Apple Computing Products:
macOS - Operating System
Help on how to fix macbook pro 13inch 2010 (cpu 1 caller 0x47f5ad)?
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