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Mac shuts off after startup

I have an early 2008 Mac Pro and when I hit the power button the computer starts loading and then about half way through loading it all of a sudden turns off. I turn it off using the power button because the power button light is faint. The next time I start it either loads up or the screen goes blank and then I have to turn off the power button again. Then the third time it usually loads with a warning box that says 'your computer shut down because of a problem' Does anybody knows what causes this ?

Mac Pro, OS X 10.11

Posted on Dec 13, 2020 9:16 PM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Dec 14, 2020 7:01 AM

The initial "chime" sound is generated in software when your Mac passes the Power-On Self Test. If it occurs and/or startup continues, your Mac is working. The blank gray screen should light up. Then on to the disk Drive.


The solid Apple is not in the Mac's ROM at Cold start. The Apple logo can only appear when it is fetched in the first "blob" of software loaded from a 'magic' place on the boot drive, or re-run after a Restart. Then a whole lot of stuff is initialized, and the progress Bar moves part way across. After a cold start, seeing the solid Apple appear says your drive is not completely dead.

The next step requires a lot of files by name, so the File System is initialized, and the Boot Drive is Mounted. If the drive directory is damaged, the drive can not be Mounted, so your Mac begins one pass of Disk Utility Repair. This will take an additional about five minutes. During this process, the progress bar may be extended, and will grow by an additional amount not seen on a routine startup.

at the end of that process (which should not take more than about five minutes), it will attempt to Mount the drive again:

-- if the drive Mounts, boot-up continues.

-- if the drive cannot be Mounted, your Mac can do nothing more, so it powers off.

-- if the process stalls, this may indicate you have Bad Blocks on your Rotating Magnetic Boot drive (if so equipped). The re-reading of Bad blocks can take a very long time (on the order of a quarter minute for each Bad Block).


PUNCHLINE: boot to recovery and repair your drive with disk Utility. Repeat until it comes clean or gets hopelessly stuck. If stuck, you will need to have a Trusted Backup on hand, or the process is very complex.

2 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Dec 14, 2020 7:01 AM in response to sinkhead7

The initial "chime" sound is generated in software when your Mac passes the Power-On Self Test. If it occurs and/or startup continues, your Mac is working. The blank gray screen should light up. Then on to the disk Drive.


The solid Apple is not in the Mac's ROM at Cold start. The Apple logo can only appear when it is fetched in the first "blob" of software loaded from a 'magic' place on the boot drive, or re-run after a Restart. Then a whole lot of stuff is initialized, and the progress Bar moves part way across. After a cold start, seeing the solid Apple appear says your drive is not completely dead.

The next step requires a lot of files by name, so the File System is initialized, and the Boot Drive is Mounted. If the drive directory is damaged, the drive can not be Mounted, so your Mac begins one pass of Disk Utility Repair. This will take an additional about five minutes. During this process, the progress bar may be extended, and will grow by an additional amount not seen on a routine startup.

at the end of that process (which should not take more than about five minutes), it will attempt to Mount the drive again:

-- if the drive Mounts, boot-up continues.

-- if the drive cannot be Mounted, your Mac can do nothing more, so it powers off.

-- if the process stalls, this may indicate you have Bad Blocks on your Rotating Magnetic Boot drive (if so equipped). The re-reading of Bad blocks can take a very long time (on the order of a quarter minute for each Bad Block).


PUNCHLINE: boot to recovery and repair your drive with disk Utility. Repeat until it comes clean or gets hopelessly stuck. If stuck, you will need to have a Trusted Backup on hand, or the process is very complex.

Mac shuts off after startup

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