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jw74

macrumors member
Original poster
Mar 15, 2009
54
0
I need to downgrade to ML on a Mini that came with Mavericks.
Has anyone done this successfully?
I made a bootable ML USB flash drive.
When I boot off if it, it won't let me install to the Mac HD.
However, it seem like it will let me install ML on the second drive(I have the server Mini w/two HDDs).
This is all a test right now, as I'm replacing both HDDs with an SSD for the boot drive and a 7200 HDD for data.
I had planned on installing ML on the original HDD and clone it to the SSD and mount this externally to test it before I open up the Mini.
Any ideas?
 
Did you format Mac HD in Disk Utility (the disk utility that is available when booting from the flash drive) before you tried the install?
 
You might have to reformat the hard drive first.
And the 2012 Mini came with 10.8 originally.
 
Internet Recovery (alt+cmd+R) at power on might do the trick.
It won't do any harm to try, and should install Mountain Lion seeing how 2012s originally shipped with ML.
 
Did you format Mac HD in Disk Utility (the disk utility that is available when booting from the flash drive) before you tried the install?

You might have to reformat the hard drive first.
And the 2012 Mini came with 10.8 originally.

I didn't. I had just made the bootable drive and was testing it. That might be it.
I'm pretty sure I heard that it could be done because of the original OS. But I couldn't find any threads that were definitive.
I guess I'll have to see when I'm ready to do put in the new drives.
Thanks.
 
I didn't. I had just made the bootable drive and was testing it. That might be it.
I'm pretty sure I heard that it could be done because of the original OS. But I couldn't find any threads that were definitive.
I guess I'll have to see when I'm ready to do put in the new drives.
Thanks.

You can put 10.8.5 on the 2012 Mini without an issue, but you probably will need to make an installer disk and start up from that and run your installation. Note that if you use internet recovery at any point, you'll get Mavericks back.
 
First -- DISREGARD the advice given in post 2. If it's a 2012 Mini, there's no reason why it won't run Mountain Lion. I doubt anything inside was changed since its introduction that would prevent you from doing this.

Having said that -- since you intend to replace the internal drives, I would suggest this course of action:
1. You'll need a way to connect the "new drive" externally. It could be a USB3/SATA dock, or an external case, or a USB3 "dongle type" connector.
2. Connect the drive and see if you can install OS 10.8 onto the new drive. It should install without problems.
3. If the basic installation works, then it's time to thoroughly "prep" the drive BEFORE you put it into the Mini. This involves migrating accounts and data, updating the OS to 10.8.5, etc.
4. Then do at least one (preferably several) "test boots" to see if the drive will boot and run the Mini as intended, and to assure yourself that it is set up as you wish.
5. If things are ok, now it's time to "do the surgery" and swap the drives around.
 
I've done that with my new late 2012 mini which came with Mavericks pre-installed from the factory using 10.8.3 installer on an SD card. I don't remember but you may have to erase the drive before installing since it contains a newer OS than the installer. Or try resetting PRAM, it might help.
 
First -- DISREGARD the advice given in post 2. If it's a 2012 Mini, there's no reason why it won't run Mountain Lion. I doubt anything inside was changed since its introduction that would prevent you from doing this.

Having said that -- since you intend to replace the internal drives, I would suggest this course of action:
1. You'll need a way to connect the "new drive" externally. It could be a USB3/SATA dock, or an external case, or a USB3 "dongle type" connector.
2. Connect the drive and see if you can install OS 10.8 onto the new drive. It should install without problems.
3. If the basic installation works, then it's time to thoroughly "prep" the drive BEFORE you put it into the Mini. This involves migrating accounts and data, updating the OS to 10.8.5, etc.
4. Then do at least one (preferably several) "test boots" to see if the drive will boot and run the Mini as intended, and to assure yourself that it is set up as you wish.
5. If things are ok, now it's time to "do the surgery" and swap the drives around.

Sounds like a good plan. Thanks!
I'm getting two usb 3.0 enclosures for the original Mini drives. So I'll have that going for me.
Does it make any sense to install ML on the original drive first and clone that to the SSD via usb? Your way seems more direct.
This computer is going to be used mainly for Pro Tools and other audio, so I won't really need to migrate anything. Pretty much a blank slate.
 
You can put 10.8.5 on the 2012 Mini without an issue, but you probably will need to make an installer disk and start up from that and run your installation. Note that if you use internet recovery at any point, you'll get Mavericks back.
Did they change the "OS it ships with policy" on the Internet recovery?

Fortunately I've got some of those fresh, new, butt-slow Mini 5400rpm drives in a drawer somewhere, and they're all Mountain Lion.
 
Did they change the "OS it ships with policy" on the Internet recovery?

Fortunately I've got some of those fresh, new, butt-slow Mini 5400rpm drives in a drawer somewhere, and they're all Mountain Lion.

Nothing has changed, but this thread is a bit confusing because the Mini went without an update for so long.

Internet recovery will always install the OS version that came from the factory. But the 2012 Mini was sold in calendar year 2012 with Mountain Lion then later in calendar year 2013 with Mavericks, so depending on when you bought it the "factory" OS could be either.

Normally because of driver issues you can't go back to an earlier version than what was shipped, but since the 2012 Mini spanned two years and two OS X versions, it is a bit of a edge case where you can go back.
 
Downgrading OSX has nothing to do with policy and everything to do with containing appropriate software drivers to run the physical hardware.

The 2012 Mini was released when Mountain Lion was current. So Mountain Lion contains the appropriate drivers to run the 2012 Mini. Later in the year when Mavericks was released the 2012 Mini did not change its physical hardware. But Mavericks also contains the appropriate drivers for the 2012 Mini.
 
Can you change the startup drive to the one with ML on it?

Yes, I can boot to the USB drive with ML on it.
It boots to the OS X Utilities screen where I can restore, reinstall…
The reinstall has the ML icon.
 
Nothing has changed, but this thread is a bit confusing because the Mini went without an update for so long.

Internet recovery will always install the OS version that came from the factory. But the 2012 Mini was sold in calendar year 2012 with Mountain Lion then later in calendar year 2013 with Mavericks, so depending on when you bought it the "factory" OS could be either.

Normally because of driver issues you can't go back to an earlier version than what was shipped, but since the 2012 Mini spanned two years and two OS X versions, it is a bit of a edge case where you can go back.
Yeah, when they take that long to update something, I wouldn't be surprised if Panther came up.
When I finally get around to it, I guess I'll do an Internet Recovery just to see what I get.
 
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Yeah, when they take that long to update something, I wouldn't be surprised if Panther came up.
When I finally get around to it, I guess I'll do an Internet Recovery just to see what I get.

It'll probably be ML, if that's what it shipped with.
Mine was Mavericks; even when I did it off of the ML boot drive.
 
It'll probably be ML, if that's what it shipped with.
Mine was Mavericks; even when I did it off of the ML boot drive.

I tried it on my two-week-old 2012. Internet Recovery wanted to install Yosemite. Now I'm using a Mavericks clone disk running in a dock. Its recovery partition is installing Mavericks on the second SSD.

I'm going to see how a Time Machine restored Mavericks works out. I've sudden gotten tired of dealing with Yosemite.
 
I tried it on my two-week-old 2012. Internet Recovery wanted to install Yosemite. Now I'm using a Mavericks clone disk running in a dock. Its recovery partition is installing Mavericks on the second SSD.

I'm going to see how a Time Machine restored Mavericks works out. I've sudden gotten tired of dealing with Yosemite.

What problems are you having with Yosemite that Mavericks will solve?
 
I tried it on my two-week-old 2012. Internet Recovery wanted to install Yosemite. Now I'm using a Mavericks clone disk running in a dock. Its recovery partition is installing Mavericks on the second SSD.

I'm going to see how a Time Machine restored Mavericks works out. I've sudden gotten tired of dealing with Yosemite.

From what I've read, if you updated to Yosemeti and did an Internet Restore it will put back Yosemeti. You will have to wipe your drive clean inorder to get your "factory" OS back via Internet Restore.
 
What problems are you having with Yosemite that Mavericks will solve?

I've had problems with iTunes. Closing on 10.10.0 generated an app shut down error message regardless of how it was closed. On 10.10.1 iTunes would not run for a day. After downloading and installing iTunes it resumed opening after a few system shut downs.

Slower start up and shut down than the same system on Mavericks.

I generally like the look of Yosemite but iTunes was really screwed over by the Microsoft-like "lets move stuff all around so it looks reimagined and new".

I installed Mav on the second SSD. It is really a big PITA to get Office 2011 and a little PITA to get CS6 going again. I am probably just still mad at myself for getting all fanboy-like and upgrading to Yosemite in the first place. I had two perfectly running Mavericks installations running.
 
I've had problems with iTunes. Closing on 10.10.0 generated an app shut down error message regardless of how it was closed. On 10.10.1 iTunes would not run for a day. After downloading and installing iTunes it resumed opening after a few system shut downs.

Slower start up and shut down than the same system on Mavericks.

I generally like the look of Yosemite but iTunes was really screwed over by the Microsoft-like "lets move stuff all around so it looks reimagined and new".

I installed Mav on the second SSD. It is really a big PITA to get Office 2011 and a little PITA to get CS6 going again. I am probably just still mad at myself for getting all fanboy-like and upgrading to Yosemite in the first place. I had two perfectly running Mavericks installations running.
I worked on a friend's machine with Yosemite over the weekend , and it's pretty unimpressive looking.
 
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