Macbook grey screen help

hmig89

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Hi guys,

Got a friend who's asked for a bit of help. His macbook does not go past a grey screen, I know where are a number of ways to troubleshoot this, however my main priority is to get the data off the current drive and back it up to a portable HDD. From what I understand if I turn on the macbook and insert the OS X disc I have (newer version that running os) and hold down the C button I can boot up with some tools available. (apparently this can also be done holding D depending when the macbook was built, I maybe wrong as its been a long morning)

What I want to know is when I enter the bootable area, I know I can run disk utility. If i create a back up from disk utility will it copy everything as if it were a clone? the apple site states it will produce a disk image of your entire Mac OS X disk's contents. If they grey screen is actually caused by something on the HDD will I still be able to access the data after backing up?

In the bootable area can I browse the current HDD and just take the files I need. Ideally I would like to grab everything and put that on a new drive.

I know you guys may need more info so please ask, apologies if I have not provided enough information, not very experienced with macs. Would appreciate your help.
 
Have you ever done a data backup on any machine that wouldn't boot, much less a Mac? Not trying to be snarky, but there are some general rules of thumb that span all platforms.
 
Hi,

When I do this on PC's I usually boot into linux live and copy any valuable data to a a portable drive. If I am making a copy of the exact data to a bigger hard drive then I image the original and apply the image to the new drive. I will have to troubleshoot the issue first but just want to be prepared in case i do need to get the data off the drive in the macbook.

what I dont want to do is image it if the grey screen is a OS/software issues as that will be on the image. In which case I will open finder form the recovery tools and back up important data.

Any advance is welcome and I stand to be educated.
 
Im guessing it will be safer to attempt the image with ddrescue rather than macs disk utility?

I was going to boot linux, use ddrescue and then boot the mac os x dvd and attempt a repair.

Looks like dd rescue as the disk utility does a backup not a clone, so OS etc not bootable. Only other anterantive to do it from the mac book is to create a boot disk with carbon copy cloner on it.
 
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Mac's have a BIOS feature called target disk mode. Turn on the unit holding down the T key. Basically makes the machine a external HD for all intents and purposes. Then you can plug it into firewire port on another machine.

That being said you may not have a machine with firewire and OS that will read HFS+. There are a number of live cd distributions that support HFS+ so you can burn a cd, boot from it on the Mac. But you have to make sure it is an EFI compatible version since Macs have been using EFI for several years now.
 
thanks

Mac's have a BIOS feature called target disk mode. Turn on the unit holding down the T key. Basically makes the machine a external HD for all intents and purposes. Then you can plug it into firewire port on another machine.

That being said you may not have a machine with firewire and OS that will read HFS+. There are a number of live cd distributions that support HFS+ so you can burn a cd, boot from it on the Mac. But you have to make sure it is an EFI compatible version since Macs have been using EFI for several years now.
Thanks Mark,

I have linux mint which should work, I have a firewire port on the front of my corsair case, can imagine it being a fast one but should do, hopefully it is compatible and live cd can detect it.

Thanks for the support.
 
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