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How do I use the Bootable Installer that I just installed on a 32 GB flash drive to recover El Capitan OS?

I just created a Bootable OS X El Capitan on a 32 GB flash drive using the Terminal app. So, how do I use the Bootable Installer to recover the El Capitan OS on my wife's iMac, without losing any data. Is this the best way to recover the operating system on her iMac, or should I use the OSXUpdCombo10.11.6.dmg that I found an Apple's website instead? I'm not sure what the difference is between the two? Please advise...

Thanks, Paul

Posted on Dec 28, 2021 4:09 PM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Dec 28, 2021 4:16 PM

Welcome to the Apple Support Communities.


In order to create a macOS bootable installer, the full OS X El Capitan installer must be downloaded, How to create a bootable installer for macOS - Apple Support, not a combo update.


Once the OS X El Capitan bootable installer has been created, follow the "Use the bootable installer" steps in How to create a bootable installer for macOS - Apple Support.


Also, if you wish to reinstall OS X El Capitan, you can do so without erasing. However, depending on what is wrong with your iMac, you may need to erase your startup disk and reinstall OS X El Capitan. It may help if you could explain again.


Cheers,


Jack

5 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Dec 28, 2021 4:16 PM in response to StarCruiser

Welcome to the Apple Support Communities.


In order to create a macOS bootable installer, the full OS X El Capitan installer must be downloaded, How to create a bootable installer for macOS - Apple Support, not a combo update.


Once the OS X El Capitan bootable installer has been created, follow the "Use the bootable installer" steps in How to create a bootable installer for macOS - Apple Support.


Also, if you wish to reinstall OS X El Capitan, you can do so without erasing. However, depending on what is wrong with your iMac, you may need to erase your startup disk and reinstall OS X El Capitan. It may help if you could explain again.


Cheers,


Jack

Dec 29, 2021 12:50 PM in response to StarCruiser

What is wrong with your wife's computer and what is the exact model of the Mac? You can get the exact model by entering the laptop's serial number here:

https://checkcoverage.apple.com/


If there is a hardware failure, then you need to be careful. Try running the Apple Diagnostics to see if any hardware issues are detected. Unfortunately the diagnostics don't detect many types of hard drive failures. If you are interested I can provide instructions for creating and using a bootable Linux USB stick to check the health of the drive plus it may even tell us if there is a hardware issue if Linux won't boot it. If the hard drive is failing, then you need to be extremely careful since running First Aid or re-installing macOS could completely kill a failing hard drive so that even a professional data recovery service may not be able to recover any data from the drive.


FYI, you should always have frequent and regular backups of your computer and any external media which contains important and unique data.


Dec 29, 2021 7:25 PM in response to StarCruiser

For a computer that old I would definitely first suspect a failing hard drive. It was also my first instinct when I first replied to you. Plus the issue with the iMac got worse after Apple started working the drive harder while attempting to fix issues because Apple's support techs do not know how to check the health of a hard drive (Apple assumes users have a backup and doesn't care if things get worse because the backup can be used to recover everything, so all their support instructions neglect to verify the health of the drive).


Personally I would first check the health of the hard drive. The severity of the failure determines the best course of action for recovering data from the iMac. Keep in mind the more a failing drive is accessed or even powered on, the worse the failure can become where even a professional data recovery service may be unable to recover any data from it.


Assuming the drive is healthy or is only just beginning to fail, then I would suggest installing macOS 10.11 to an external drive so you can boot the iMac using the external drive. If the internal drive is just beginning to fail, then it may be possible to transfer most of the files to the external drive (there are a couple of ways to do this depending on the health of the internal drive -- either manually through the Finder or using Carbon Copy Cloner the latter is able to skip files producing errors and log which ones could not be transferred). I would probably do this even if the internal drive is healthy since you never know if First Aid could make the problem worse and lose access to the data (probably not, but there is always a risk if you don't have a backup). Plus if the internal drive is physcially healthy and First Aid is unable to fix the file system on the internal drive, then you can attempt to repair it using a third party utility that tends to work magic on corrupted HFS+ file systems.


If you have access to another Mac, then you could attempt to access the data on the iMac's drive by putting the iMac into Target Disk Mode. Again, you should only attempt this if the hard drive is verified to be healthy or only has a few bad sectors so far.


Checking the drive's health requires using a special utility to access the hard drive's built in health information to get an accurate idea of how bad the failure is. The Apple Diagnostics will only tell you the drive has issues, but not how severe the issues are plus the diagnostics don't detect most drive failures. The special utility to access the hard drive's health information is the only way to get a reasonably accurate idea of the drive's health.


Dec 29, 2021 6:06 PM in response to HWTech

My wife called Apple to find out why Mac Mail kept crashing, plus she was also unable to access her mail in iCloud. So, several techs were involved, but by the time they finished, her iMac would no longer boot. Because of it's age, they basically abandoned her and she was left with a computer that wouldn't turn on. In fact, it would get as far as the boot chime and then shut down. Even though I am a PC man, I offered to help and was finally able to stop it from crashing and then access Disk Utilities. I made a Disk Image of her 3TB hard drive, which is fairly new, and then ran First Aid to repair and issues with the hard drive. Then I used a page on the Apple site to make a bootable flash drive. Her iMac is: 24" Early 2009 IMAC-09DCC5

Ser No: QP92900POTG 2.66Ghz Intel Core 2 Duo 4 GB 204-Pin SO-DIMM DDR3 1067 MHz SDRAM (PC3-8500) non parity, unbuffered (max 2x4 GB = 8 GB, 3TB Hard Drive

Dec 30, 2021 5:16 AM in response to HWTech

Thanks for your reply HWTech. Unfortunately, there is in way to access Finder or used an app like Carbon Copy Cloner, unless it can be run from an external Flash or Backup drive, because the OS is not booting up. The most I can do is press Command R and then choose Reinstall OS X, which always results in an error code, or press the Option key during reboot to choose a drive.


How do I use the Bootable Installer that I just installed on a 32 GB flash drive to recover El Capitan OS?

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