- Joined
- Oct 5, 2017
- Messages
- 192
- Motherboard
- Z370 AORUS Gaming 7
- CPU
- i7-8700K
- Graphics
- RX 580
- Mac
- Mobile Phone
I have a hackintosh that is running perfectly.
I'm one who adheres to "if it ain't broke, don't fix it..." so I don't really want to change anything.
However, it was brought to my attention that during my initial MultiBeast setup, I used the default system definition (iMac14,2) and my build is a Coffee Lake 8th gen i7-8700K, so I should have selected the system definition of (iMac 18,3).
Is there any reason why I should go though the trouble of changing the system definition from (iMac14,2) to (iMac 18,3) if my hackintosh is running perfectly?
I can assume that since I selected the system definition for 5 year old machine, in the future I may run into a macOS install issue where the older definition is no longer supported by macOS, but would there be any sort of benefit in performance or anything else that would make changing the system definition now recommended on a 100% working machine?
Any info is appreciated, thanks.
I'm one who adheres to "if it ain't broke, don't fix it..." so I don't really want to change anything.
However, it was brought to my attention that during my initial MultiBeast setup, I used the default system definition (iMac14,2) and my build is a Coffee Lake 8th gen i7-8700K, so I should have selected the system definition of (iMac 18,3).
Is there any reason why I should go though the trouble of changing the system definition from (iMac14,2) to (iMac 18,3) if my hackintosh is running perfectly?
I can assume that since I selected the system definition for 5 year old machine, in the future I may run into a macOS install issue where the older definition is no longer supported by macOS, but would there be any sort of benefit in performance or anything else that would make changing the system definition now recommended on a 100% working machine?
Any info is appreciated, thanks.