Creating bootable USB for OS X Leopard. Ask Question Asked 7 years. Apple provides a tool to create Lion boot usb using the download from apple store and its quite straight forward. – latusaki Jul 7 '12 at 20:54. Repair disk on Snow Leopard using a bootable USB, in order to upgrade to Lion. Create a Portable Mac OS X 10.4, 10.5, 10.6 Install on a USB Flash Drive. In the meantime, you can follow the instructions on installing Mac OS X Snow Leopard from an external hard drive and they are virtually the same, you can modify those yourself for Tiger if need be, but OS X Snow Leopard is really a good Mac OS X so perhaps that’s the. Creating a USB Flash Drive Installer from a Snow Leopard ISO File This was tested using an iMac (21.5-inch, Mid 2011) 2.5 GHz Intel Core i5 with MacOS High Sierra 10.13.6 installed. 5 common mistakes that make you look unprofessional online work. The procedure should be the same for Catalina.
- Create Bootable Usb From Dmg Mac Snow Leopard Dmg
- Create Bootable Usb From Dmg Mac Snow Leopard Mac
- Create Bootable Usb From Dmg Mac Snow Leopard 10.6


Not tried this so it may/may not work. If you go into System Prefs (on your new iMac) and enable DVD or CD sharing in the 'Sharing' folder, you may, in the sidebar of your old MacBook be able to see the iMac's CD drive. Putting the install DVD in the iMac then allows you to install onto the MacBook if it all works OK, but as I say not sure of compatibility or features available in Leopard etc and have also just thought you may be installing onto a newly formatted drive in the macBook so won't see anything but could be worth trying. Free gis maps. Hope that helps.

Feb 20, 2017 1:35 AM
Create Bootable Usb From Dmg Mac Snow Leopard Dmg
Like the original poster, I've found a number of machines that require a Snow Leopard installer higher than what may be available (since the owners of those machines have invariably lost their discs and/or have bricked their optical drives). My method (and I will freely admit this was not my original idea) is to use a disk image of a 10.6.8 working HD that has not yet been through the personalization. I 'restored' this image to a few destinations—a toolkit, of sorts—a USB hard drive, FireWire HD, USB flash drive, and even a SDHC card. Then I went through the personalization with each one. Finally, I copied the original disk image (as a .dmg) to these destinations. Obviously, you need something like a 16GB flash drive or SDHC card.
I can then boot the intended 'target' machine using one of these devices and use Disk Utility to restore the 'virgin' 10.6.8 disk image to the machine's hard drive. With a FireWire machine, however, it's often easier to boot the target machine in target disk mode, plug it into my iMac, and do the restore from there.
As a side benefit, there are very few software updates then required.
Create Bootable Usb From Dmg Mac Snow Leopard Mac

Create Bootable Usb From Dmg Mac Snow Leopard 10.6
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