Macos Big Sur Unsupported Mac

Mac

  1. The official version of macOS Big Sur is released
    macOS Big Sur brings the combination of powerful strength and beautiful appearance to a new level. The carefully crafted new design allows you to fully experience the charm of the Mac; the Safari browser is ushered in a major update, waiting for you to enjoy; the map app and the information app are loaded with new functions for you to explore; more transparent privacy permissions, protection More thoughtful.
    macOS Big Sur 11 release date: 2020.11.12
  2. Unsupported models and problems
    According to the summary of macrumors, unsupported Macs can be divided into several situations:
    Mac models that officially support macOS Catalina but are not supported by macOS Big Sur:
    – These Macs can run Big Sur normally, but Wi-Fi cannot work normally. (This type of model is the easiest to run Big Sur perfectly through the patch, currently it is only a Wi-Fi problem.)
    You can follow the steps below, this article is mainly for this type of model.
    2012 and Early 2013 MacBook Pro
    Not officially supported in macOS Catalina, but are fully capable of running both Catalina and large Sur with a Metal-compatible GPU and upgraded Wifi/BT card. Mac can be patched to run macOS Catalina normally, and it may be patched to run macOS Big Sur: – These Macs can currently launch Big Sur, but there is currently no Wifi or graphics acceleration support. This type of model requires additional steps to solve installation problems. Early-2008 or newer Mac Pro, iMac, or MacBook Pro: MacPro3,1
    Macmini5,x (systems with AMD Radeon HD 6xxx series GPUs were almost unusable when running Catalina and will be under Big Sur as well.)
    MacBook5,2
    Xserve3,1*

    *Not officially supported in macOS Catalina, but are fully capable of running both Catalina and large Sur with a Metal-compatible GPU and upgraded Wifi/BT card.
    Completely unsupported Mac:
    This type of model does not need to consider installing Big Sur.
    Macmini2,1
    — The 2007 iMac 7,1 is compatible with Catalina and potentially Big Sur if the CPU is upgraded to a Penryn-based Core 2 Duo, like a T9300.
    2006-2008 MacBooks:
    MacBook4,1 (as with Mojave and Catalina, we’ll get on our own here, but Big Sur are going to be running on this machine!)
    2008 MacBook Air (MacBookAir 1,1)
    All PowerPC-based Macs
    All 68k-based Macs
  3. Download macOS Big Sur
    Mac App Store
    Open the App Store and directly search for macOS to download.
    After the download is complete, you can see that Install macOS Big Sur is located in the application (Application) directory.
    Baidu SkyDrive DMG Mirror
    Please visit: https://sysin.org/article/macOS-Big-Sur/
    After downloading, double-click to open the dmg file, and drag Install macOS Big Sur to the application (Application).
  4. Patch Tool Download
    (1) Hax.dylib: link 1
    (2) big-sur-micropatcher
  5. Installation method: new installation or upgrade installation under the current system
    (0) Prerequisites
    Make sure the Mac is currently running on macOS Catalina.
    (1) Boot to recovery mode (recovery mode)
    When booting or restarting, press and hold Command + R until the splash screen (Apple logo) appears.
    If there is no recovery partition, you need to press Command + Option + R to start Internet Recovery.
    (2) Disable sip (System Integrity Protection)
    Utilities -> Terminal Enter the command csrutil disable and press enter.
    (3) Disable compatibility check
    Continue to execute commands in the terminal:
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    nvram boot-args=”-no_compat_check”
    (4) Restart, start macOS Catalina normally
    (5) Disable libraries validation
    Open the terminal and execute the command:
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    sudo defaults write /Library/Preferences/com.apple.security.libraryvalidation.plist DisableLibraryValidation -bool true
    (6) Insert library
    Put the downloaded Hax.dylib file in the home directory, namely /Users// directory, and execute the command in the terminal:
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    launchctl setenv DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES $PWD/Hax.dylib
    (7) Start to install macOS Big Sur
    Clean install
    Before starting the installation, we open the “Disk Utility” to create a new APFS volume, and then double-click Install macOS Big Sur in the application to start the installation. Select the newly created volume as the target disk. After the installation is complete, it will automatically boot to the new system.
    After installation, you can delete the APFS volume where the original system is located, leaving only the Big Sur system.
    Upgrade installation
    Double-click Install macOS Big Sur in the application to start the normal installation. The installation target partition selects the partition where the current system is located, that is, the upgrade installation is performed automatically.
    By default, the factory setting has only one partition named: Macintosh HD
    (8) Solve the problem of network card driver
    In some models, the wireless network card is already working (Late 2013 iMac, or your 2012/2013 model uses an 802.11ac network card instead of an 802.11n network card).
    If the wireless network card cannot work, you need to deal with it as follows:
    You need to use the method in item 7 below to create a bootable U disk. Restart the system, hold down the Option key until the boot partition selection screen appears, boot to “Install macOS Big Sur”, after booting, select “Utilities -> Terminal” and execute the following commands (three formats) Both can be supported, choose one of them, “Macintosh HD” is your default system installation partition name, replace it according to the actual name):
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    /Volumes/Image Volume/patch-kexts.sh /Volumes/Macintosh HD
    ‘/Volumes/Image Volume/patch-kexts.sh”/Volumes/Macintosh HD’
    “/Volumes/Image Volume/patch-kexts.sh” “/Volumes/Macintosh HD”
    Then restart to macOS Big Sur, at this time Wi-Fi is already normal.
  6. Installation method: fresh installation using removable media
    Tip: U disk can also be replaced by mobile hard disk, especially SSD mobile hard disk, which is faster.
    7.1, create boot media
    (1) Create a bootable U disk
    Prepare a 16G or above U disk, open “Utilities> Disk Utility”, select the U disk, click “Erase”, the format is as follows:
    Mac OS X extension (Journaled);
    GUID partition map;
    Partition name: MyVolume (The default is Untitled, which can be customized. Note that MyVolume in the terminal command below should also be changed to the same name you customized)
    Open the terminal and execute the following command:
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    sudo /Appli

Mac Mini 2012 Big Sur

  • Mar 02, 2021 what about for unsupported Macs?there should be one because my Mac doesn’t support Big Sur but it can handle way better than the newer Macs.it is a mid-2012 MacBook Pro model.well you can put for an unsupported Mac section.
  • Jan 15, 2021 If you have past experience using the excellent DosDude tool for Mojave or for installing Catalina on unsupported Macs, you’ll find the Big Sur Micropatcher is not quite as simple, and Dosdude has already publicly stated that a Big Sur patcher will not become available. The experience now is closer to that of running a Hackintosh PC compared to simply patching an installer and letting it run on an older Mac.

Install Macos Big Sur On Unsupported Mac

Install macOS normally onto the desired volume. When the install completes, reboot back onto the installer drive. This time, open the 'macOS Post Install' application. In the application, select the Mac model you are using. The optimal patches will be selected for you based on the model you select.