- Joined
- Nov 30, 2016
- Messages
- 53
- Motherboard
- ASUS ProArt Z490 Creator/10G
- CPU
- i9-10850K
- Graphics
- UHD 630
- Mac
- Classic Mac
- Mobile Phone
Bro, this TOTALLY worked.. . once. After the first time (and booting with them separately, then together) it went back to the old behavior. Its a good solution, but it would require me to keep everything unplugged til I was ready to work. Not viable in my current setup, but you definitely showed its possible. Thanks.Here are some tips from my many years of mucking about with Antelope Audio and TB3 stuff:
- Unplug both your computer and interface from power entirely for 1 minute to let ALL the capacitors drain fully.
- Unplug the Thunderbolt cable from both the computer/interface/ and TB adapter if used.
- replug the TB3 cable to the interface
- ONLY TB2/3 cable plugged in, do not have the USB cable plugged into the port on the interface.
- Plug in the interface power only, and now make sure that Thunderbolt is selected as the Comm Interface using the built in controls
- Plug TB3 cable back in to Hackintosh
- Plug power in to PC and boot hackintosh
- The device MAY not be seen fully at first boot, the way to tell is to go ito IORegistryExplorer and look in your PCI devices (RP05-20 etc) and see if the device ID shows up but no name or drivers underneath. Sometimes both real macs and hacks have the driver do this and the remedy is a simple warm reboot.
- If no Device ID is present, reboot the system and physically plug the TB3 cable in during the Opencore or Opencanopy menus and see if it appears.
Bios settings to also check to see:
-Thunderbolt Boot Support: Enabled
-Forcepower: Enabled (may not be present in your bios)
BTW, They're daisy-chained. I'm betting if they were on separate ports this wouldn't be an issue, but that takes away from the convenience of the TB platform.
Update: I was using a SSDT designed for Alpine Ridge. Switched to a Titan Ridge aml and everything worked!
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