- Joined
- Nov 28, 2018
- Messages
- 79
- Motherboard
- asus z370-i
- CPU
- i7-9700k
- Graphics
- RX 580
- Mac
- Classic Mac
- Mobile Phone
I simply can not get the OC-installer USB to boot correctly. After choosing "Install macOS…" in the OC-Bootloader it get's stuck very quickly on some ACPI related errors (see image Attached).
-> may your BIOS settings are not set correctly
-> What WLAN Module do you use? / I replaced mine with a BCM / AirportExtreme
-> I'd disabled the USB 3.1 completely because it's not a Intel Chipset
--> I have the latest BIOS installed, try to do a default reset and apply the settings that are recommended from dortania
Afterwards I tried to create a custom one but apparently can't figure out how to get this done correctly (don't have linux or windows, tried the manual approach on mac)
--> Stick with my files and do not try to mix and match other files. My SSDT files are working fine. Without any issues and this should also the case if you use the same motherboard than I do. Start to optimise the things after you have a working configuration
--> HOWTO; task that can only be done via Linux or windows. If you create a LINUX Mint boot stick and download the files to running system the job is done in 5min. /
slowgeek
--> The goal must be no errors at all with the correct CPU and OC Version. Thats good
[Solved] Installation stuck, ACPI Error: AE_NOT_FOUND
I want to build my first Hackintosh (High Sierra). I boot the High Sierra OS installation with the boot options verbose and safe mode. After "MAC Framework successfully initialized" I get the following errors twice: ACPI Error: [_SB_.PC10.RP05.PXSX] Namespace lookup failure, AE_NOT_FOUND...
www.tonymacx86.com
-> may your BIOS settings are not set correctly
-> What WLAN Module do you use? / I replaced mine with a BCM / AirportExtreme
-> I'd disabled the USB 3.1 completely because it's not a Intel Chipset
--> I have the latest BIOS installed, try to do a default reset and apply the settings that are recommended from dortania
Afterwards I tried to create a custom one but apparently can't figure out how to get this done correctly (don't have linux or windows, tried the manual approach on mac)
--> Stick with my files and do not try to mix and match other files. My SSDT files are working fine. Without any issues and this should also the case if you use the same motherboard than I do. Start to optimise the things after you have a working configuration
--> HOWTO; task that can only be done via Linux or windows. If you create a LINUX Mint boot stick and download the files to running system the job is done in 5min. /
slowgeek
--> The goal must be no errors at all with the correct CPU and OC Version. Thats good
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