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Apple Computing Products:
macOS - Apps and Programs
Restoring Entire System Using Timemachine
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<blockquote data-quote="chscag" data-source="post: 1452703" data-attributes="member: 46727"><p>Usually the cure for a corrupt hard drive is its replacement. Seldom does making a TM backup and then reinstalling OS X and restoring from TM solve the problem. I have no idea if your TM backup was a good one or restoring to a hard drive that still may have errors is the reason the restore is not going well.</p><p></p><p>Boot the Mac from your install disk and run another check on the hard drive. Also, you might want to download and run the <a href="http://download.cnet.com/SMARTReporter/3000-2086_4-49263.html" target="_blank">SMART reporter</a> which does a more thorough check on the drive.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="chscag, post: 1452703, member: 46727"] Usually the cure for a corrupt hard drive is its replacement. Seldom does making a TM backup and then reinstalling OS X and restoring from TM solve the problem. I have no idea if your TM backup was a good one or restoring to a hard drive that still may have errors is the reason the restore is not going well. Boot the Mac from your install disk and run another check on the hard drive. Also, you might want to download and run the [URL="http://download.cnet.com/SMARTReporter/3000-2086_4-49263.html"]SMART reporter[/URL] which does a more thorough check on the drive. [/QUOTE]
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Apple Computing Products:
macOS - Apps and Programs
Restoring Entire System Using Timemachine
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