You're going to have to format the drives for use. Get a Snow Leopard DVD, and boot it pressing C or Option and selecting the DVD.
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After you get it booted, you'll want to look under Applications or Utilities, and select Disk Utility. After you load it, you will need to wait for it to recognize the drive/s. That said, it can detect which ones need to be initialized in some cases, but not al so ***be careful*** if it doesn't. You will want to format in MacOS Extended (Journaled).
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After you get it booted, you'll want to look under Applications or Utilities, and select Disk Utility. After you load it, you will need to wait for it to recognize the drive/s. That said, it can detect which ones need to be initialized in some cases, but not all so ***be careful*** if it doesn't. You will want to format in MacOS Extended (Journaled).
You're going to have to format the drives for use. Get a OS X Snow Leopard DVD, and boot into this. This will give you Disk Utility.
+
You're going to have to format the drives for use. Get a Snow Leopard DVD, and boot it pressing C or Option and selecting the DVD.
-
To boot this, hold C or the Option key down, and select the Snow Leopard DVD.
-
-
Once you do this, find Disk Utility. It's under Applications/Utilities. After you load it, wait for it to see the drives. In some cases, it will detect the drives need to be initalized. If it does, initialize them this way. If not, select them manually, and do it that way.
-
-
You want to use Mac OS Extended(Journaled). Don't use anything less then this.
+
After you get it booted, you'll want to look under Applications or Utilities, and select Disk Utility. After you load it, you will need to wait for it to recognize the drive/s. That said, it can detect which ones need to be initialized in some cases, but not al so ***be careful*** if it doesn't. You will want to format in MacOS Extended (Journaled).
You need to format the drives for use You're going to have to format the drives for use. Get a OS X Snow Leopard DVD, and boot into this. This will give you Disk Utility.
-
To boot this, hold C or the Option key down, and select the Snow Leopard DVD.
-
Once you do this, find Disk Utility. It's under Applications/Utilities. After you load it, wait for it to see the drives. In some cases, it will detect the drives need to be initalized. If it does, initialize them this way. If not, select them manually, and do it that way.
+
You're going to have to format the drives for use. Get a OS X Snow Leopard DVD, and boot into this. This will give you Disk Utility.
+
+
To boot this, hold C or the Option key down, and select the Snow Leopard DVD.
+
+
Once you do this, find Disk Utility. It's under Applications/Utilities. After you load it, wait for it to see the drives. In some cases, it will detect the drives need to be initalized. If it does, initialize them this way. If not, select them manually, and do it that way.
+
You want to use Mac OS Extended(Journaled). Don't use anything less then this.
find the drive that needs formatting(one that dosent work)
-
-
find erase in disk utility
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-
format it to MACOS extended(journaled)
+
You need to format the drives for use You're going to have to format the drives for use. Get a OS X Snow Leopard DVD, and boot into this. This will give you Disk Utility.
+
To boot this, hold C or the Option key down, and select the Snow Leopard DVD.
+
Once you do this, find Disk Utility. It's under Applications/Utilities. After you load it, wait for it to see the drives. In some cases, it will detect the drives need to be initalized. If it does, initialize them this way. If not, select them manually, and do it that way.
+
You want to use Mac OS Extended(Journaled). Don't use anything less then this.
You need to format the drives for use
to do this, boot into your master that works
go to utilities in applacations
find disk utility
find the drive that needs formatting(one that dosent work)
find erase in disk utility
format it to MACOS extended(journaled)