Macbook Pro Backup Disk
Macbook Pro Backup Disk
- Macbook Pro Backup Disk External Hard Drive
- Macbook Pro Backup Drive
- Backup Macbook Pro Hard Drive
- Macbook Pro Backup Disk
- Macbook Pro Backup Disk Hard Drive
When the MacBook Pro is dead or crashed, or it can not boot properly, the first thing is to recover data from the dead Mac hard drive. How to recover data from dead MacBook Pro or MacBook Air? EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard for Mac with Bootable Media and several manual methods will help you to recover data from MacBook Pro hard drive and repair failed/unbootable Mac hard drive in the simplest way.
A bit of MacBook Pro magic for you whether you have a MacBook Pro, Air, iMac to allow you to take your own local backups. Because you never know when your iCloud backup might fail or be inaccessible if there is a network issue. Aimed at multimedia professionals, the CalDigit AV Pro 2 is a well-designed, Mac-formatted external drive that comes in SSD and spinning disk versions, and includes both a USB hub and Thunderbolt. While Apple has been going the way of USB-C and Thunderbolt 3 for a while now, some of us still use older hardware and thus don't need hard drives that have USB-C connections. If you're still rocking USB-A or even a Thunderbolt 2 connection from your Mac, the G-Technology G-DRIVE USB 3.0 (4TB) is a perfect companion. This option on boot trick works for quite literally any boot volume, whether it’s an external USB drive of any sort, a Thunderbolt hard drive, boot DVD, CD, the Recovery partition, even in dual-boot environments with other versions of OS X, or a Linux or a Windows partition with Boot Camp, if it’s bootable and connected to the Mac it will be visible at this boot manager. Acronis is a name well known in the Windows world, but less so to Mac users. True Image is its personal backup solution and it supports backing up your data to a local disk, Acronis' own cloud.
You can follow this page to either repair a failed hard drive on Mac or recover data from a dead Mac hard drive.
Workable Solutions | Step-by-step Troubleshooting |
---|---|
Fix 1. MacBook Data Recovery | Method 1. Restore Mac data from dead MacBook...Full steps Method 2. Recover dead Mac hard drive data to another computer...Full steps |
Fix 2. Repair Failed Mac Hard Drive | Method 1. Run First Aid to Repair Failed Mac Hard Drive using Disk Utility...Full steps Method 2. Fix Won't Turn on MacBook Pro or Mac Computers...Full steps |
How Do I Recover Data from My Dead MacBook Pro?
'My MacBook Pro died and stopped working last week. It won't turn on from then on and gets stuck in the process of trying to boot up. Is there any way I can recover data from the dead MacBook Pro?'
As one of the most popular desktop devices, MacbookPro elevates the notebook to a whole new level of performance and portability. Although Macbook Pro works normally in most cases, however, something wrong may occasionally happen, such as it may suddenly crash or die due to various reasons.
Here is a list of major reasons that may cause you Mac computer died or fail to boot:
- Computer wear and tear, or aging
- System crash
- Hard drive failure
- Virus attack
- Too many bad sectors
When the problem occurs, you can neither boot the MacBook Pro nor can you access the data on the hard drive. At this time, the first thing you can do is to get data off the dead MacBook Pro is using a professional Mac data recovery software. Then you can use the built-in Disk Utility or other methods to repair the corrupted hard drive on MacBook Pro with ease.
The provided solutions on this page also work to recover data from dead Mac hard drive on MacBook, MacBook Air, etc., computers. Read on and see the detailed how-to guide.
MacBook Data Recovery: Recover Data from Dead MacBook Pro
If you have a Time Machine backup on MacBook Pro, you can follow methods in the next part to repair failed hard drive, make MacBook pro bootable again, and restore Mac data from Time Machine backup.
If you don't have a backup, don't worry. You can try the following two methods to restore data from dead MacBook Pro to an external hard drive to another computer.
Method 1. Recover Data from Dead MacBook Pro to an External Hard Drive
Professional Mac hard drive data recovery program - EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard for Mac with bootable media can effectively recover lost photos, audio, music, documents, emails from failed/crashed/dead MacBook Pro.
EaseUS Mac data recovery software also supports recovering deleted files from the emptied Trash, external hard drives, USB flash drives, memory cards, SD cards, etc. on Mac OS X 10.9 to macOS Catalina 10.15.
Now, you can follow the tutorial below to create a bootable recovery drive and recover data from the dead MacBook Pro hard drive with a few steps:
How to Create a USB Bootable Media
Step 1. Install and run EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard for Mac on another Mac computer, select 'File' > 'Create Bootable USB'. Then, choose a USB drive to create the bootable disc.
- Warning
- The creator will prompt to erase the drive to reallocate the space; then it can write the bootable files to this drive. Please back up all USB files before processing 'Eraser'.
Step 2. The program starts to create a 2GB space and save the boot files. The rest space on the USB can be still used for storage.
Step 3. Once it completes, please follow the guide to boot the corrupted Mac from the bootable disc and start the recovery. We suggest you restore the data to an external hard drive.
How to Recover Data from Mac Hard Disk
Step 1. Select the disk location (it can be an internal HDD/SSD or a removable storage device) where you lost data and files. Click the 'Scan' button.
Step 2. EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard for Mac will immediately scan your selected disk volume and display the scanning results on the left pane.
Macbook Pro Backup Disk External Hard Drive
Step 3. In the scan results, select the file(s) and click the 'Recover Now' button to have them back.
Note: Remember to save the recovered Mac data to another secure external hard drive and then follow methods in the next part to repair the problematic Mac hard drive.
Method 2. Recover Mac Hard Drive Data to Another PC/Mac
Note: As the following tips will break your computer warranty and you are on a warranty, don't try the provided tips. Also, if you are not experienced in removing or inserting hard drive on Mac computers, revert back to Method 1 for help.
If you have two computers at home, you can also try the following steps to restore Mac hard drive data to another computer:
First. Remove Mac hard drive and connect it to another computer
Required tools: a screwdriver, an external hard drive enclosure, and a USB connection cable.
Step 1. Open your Mac computer case, remove the hard drive with your screwdriver.
Step 2. Put your Mac hard drive into the external hard drive enclosure, and connect it to your computer.
Macbook Pro Backup Drive
Next. Access and check the data
On Windows Computer: Open the Windows File Explorer, double-click to check the hard drive data.
On Mac: Double-click the disk icon on the desktop and check if you can access the hard drive and its data.
If you can access the data, congratulations. You've successfully got your data out of the dead MacBook Pro. If not data shows up, refers to the next step.
Last. Restore Mac Hard Drive to Another Computer
On Windows computer, you can download the Windows version of EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard to scan and recover data from Mac hard drive to PC with ease.
On Mac computer, you can follow the three steps below to directly scan and bring the Mac hard drive data back:
Step 1. Select the disk location (it can be an internal HDD/SSD or a removable storage device) where you lost data and files. Click the 'Scan' button.
Step 2. EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard for Mac will immediately scan your selected disk volume and display the scanning results on the left pane.
Step 3. In the scan results, select the file(s) and click the 'Recover Now' button to have them back.
After this, you've successfully restore data from your dead MacBook Pro.
How to Repair a Failed Hard Drive or Dead MacBook Pro
When you meet these issues on MacBook Pro, such as MacBook Pro is dead, Mac won't start up, multiple apps quit unexpectedly, a file is corrupted, and an external device doesn't work properly, you are highly possible having a problematic Mac hard drive.
Usually, when your Mac computer dead or failed to boot up, it's highly possible that the problem exists on your Mac hard drive or the macOS. As the causes are different, the fixes may also differ.
Method 1. Run First Aid to Repair Failed Mac Hard Drive using Disk Utility
Disk Utility is a built-in Mac disk management tool that can also fix some disk problems, like Mac hard drive won't boot.
After restoring the Mac hard drive data to a safe place, you can use the Disk Utility to check for errors and repair problematic hard drive and volumes with the following steps:
Step 1. Restart your Mac computer, press and hold Command + R keys simultaneously.
Step 2. Click 'Disk Utility' and then 'Continue'.
Step 3. Go to 'View' > 'Show All Devices'.
Choose the Mac hard drive to be repaired.
Step 4. Click 'First Aid' and then 'Run'. Click 'Done' when the process completes.
If Disk Utility reports that the disk appears to be OK or has been repaired, you've finished.
If Disk Utility tells you the disk is about to fail, you can't repair it, got back to Method 1 with the provided Mac data recovery tool to export all the data from dead Mac immediately. Then you can either choose to replace the old Mac hard drive with a new one or directly switch to everything - your data to a new Mac computer.
Method 2. Fix Won't Turn on MacBook Pro or Mac Computers
When the Mac computer is installed with a piratic macOS or the macOS crashes, the MacBook Pro or other Mac computers may also fail to boot. And some even don't react at all, showing like a dead computer.
So how to fix this issue? Here are 5 ways that you can try to fix Mac computer won't turn on issue:
- Fix 1. Fix PRAM/NVRAM
- Fix 2. Reset SMC
- Fix 3. Boot in Safe Mode
- Fix 4. Run Disk Utility
- Fix 5. Reinstall macOS
For a step-by-step guide, please refer to Mac won't boot for help.
Conclusion & MacBook Data Recovery FAQs
On this page, we covered the reasons that cause MacBook Pro and hard drive dead. To recover the lost Mac hard drive data immediately, turn to EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard for Mac.
It will quickly scan and restore your lost Mac hard drive data with a created data recovery bootable disk. You can also try to switch the old Mac hard drive to a new computer, and check if you can access the data.
As for repairing the problematic Mac hard drive, you can run Disk Utility with its First Aid feature to see if the disk can be fixed. If nothing works, you can consider changing a Mac computer or try the recommend 5 methods to fix the Mac computer that won't turn on.
If you still have some questions about MacBook data recovery, check the quick answers below to help yourself out:
1. How do I recover data from my Mac?
When you lost data on Mac computer, here are three ways that you can try to recover data from Mac:
Method 1. Restore Deleted Files from Mac Trash Bin
Method 2. Recover Data from Time Machine Backup
Method 3. Recover Data using Mac Data Recovery Software, such as EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard.
2. Does Apple offer data recovery?
According to Apple's hard drive data recovery and warranty implications: 'Hard drives that have become non-functional through normal use, and have had data recovery performed on them by third-party companies specializing in data recovery services can be returned to Apple for warranty service...'.
3. How do I recover data from my MacBook after factory reset?
The possibility to recover data after factory resetting MacBook is not very high. But, as long as you didn't save any new files on the Mac hard drive after the factory reset, you can still try to run EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard for Mac and check if it can find something for you.
If you need a complete guide to factory reset a Mac computer, refer to Factory Reset MacBook without Losing Data for help.
4. How do I recover data from my Macbook SSD?
As you know that SSD has a Trim mode, and if you turned on the Trim mode, everything you deleted cannot be restored.
Therefore, if you need to restore data from SSD, you need first check the SSD Trim status; Then if the Trim is disabled, run EaseUS Mac data recovery software to scan and restore data from your Mac SSD.
To use Time Machine to make a backup of your Mac, you need any of these types of storage devices:
- External drive connected to an AirPort Extreme Base Station (802.11ac) or AirPort Time Capsule
After setting up the storage device, you can use Time Machine to make a backup of your Mac. And after making your backup, you can use Time Machine to restore files from your backup.
External drive connected to your Mac
Time Machine can back up to an external drive connected to a USB, Thunderbolt, or FireWire port on your Mac.
External drive connected to an AirPort Extreme Base Station (802.11ac) or AirPort Time Capsule
Backup Macbook Pro Hard Drive
Time Machine can back up to an external USB drive connected to an AirPort Extreme Base Station (802.11ac model) or AirPort Time Capsule.
- Make sure that the USB drive is formatted for Time Machine.
- Connect the drive to a USB port on your AirPort base station, then turn it on.
- Open AirPort Utility, then select your base station and click Edit to view its settings.
- Click the Disks tab in the settings window.
- Select your backup disk from the list of partitions, then select ”Enable file sharing”:
- If more than one user on your network will back up to this disk with Time Machine, you can use the Secure Shared Disks pop-up menu to make sure that they can view only their own backups, not yours. Choose ”With accounts” from the menu, then click the Add (+) button to add users.
- Click Update to restart your base station and apply the settings.
AirPort Time Capsule
Time Machine can back up to the built-in hard disk of an AirPort Time Capsule on your network.
Macbook Pro Backup Disk
Mac shared as a Time Machine backup destination
To use another Mac on your network as a Time Machine backup destination, complete these steps on the other Mac:
- Choose Apple menu > System Preferences, then click Sharing.
- From the list of services on the left, select File Sharing.
- From the list of Shared Folders on the right, Control-click the folder that you want to use for Time Machine backups.
- From the shortcut menu that opens, choose Advanced Options.
- From the Advanced Options dialog, select ”Share as a Time Machine backup destination.”
Macbook Pro Backup Disk Hard Drive
When setting up Time Machine on your other Mac computers, you should now be able to select the shared folder as a backup disk.
Network-attached storage (NAS) device that supports Time Machine over SMB
Many third-party NAS devices support Time Machine over SMB. For details, check the documentation for your NAS device.
How to format a disk for Time Machine
Time Machine supports all Mac OS Extended (Journaled) formats and Xsan formats. If the disk isn't using the correct format, Time Machine automatically prompts you to erase it when you connect it to your Mac:
If you need to erase the disk manually, use the Disk Utility app to erase using the Mac OS Extended (Journaled) format.
Time Machine can't back up to an iOS device or disk formatted for Windows. And if your disk uses the Master Boot Record (MBR) partition scheme, some of its partitions might not be available for use with Time Machine.
Macbook Pro Backup Disk