Installing OSX on a 11 year old iMac

Hello


I'm trying to setup an old iMac (Model A1311, from 2011) for my elderly mother. It came to me wiped (apparently - although I haven't been able to verify that, as it won't boot). Apparently it shipped with OSX Lion (10.7) but can be upgraded to OSX High Sierra (10.13). I happened to have a bootable USB flash drive set up with the  High Sierra (10.13) installer, so figured this would be a piece of cake....wrong!! 



Approach #1


When I start the iMac, with the USB drive plugged in, it boots to the OSX Utilities screen. I used Disk Utility to erase the HD, then exited back to the OSX Utilities screen - where I connected it to WiFi, and selected the ‘Reinstall OSX’ option.  It then loads an El Capitan installation screen (10.11) and states it “needs to verify the computer’s eligibility with Apple”. I click ok - it thinks - then returns with “An error occurred while preparing the installation. Try running this application again”.  I tried again - but the result was the same.




Approach #2


So from the Apple menu, I select the USB drive as the startup disk (it comes up listed as an OSX High Sierra 10.13.6 installer) - and the computer appears to start from the USB drive - it takes ages to start -and appears to be going through an installation process - but that doesn’t ‘take’, as when I try to select a different startup disk, expecting to find OSX 10.13.6 as an option, the only option is the bootable USB installer. 



Any tips on how to proceed would be gratefully received!



Matthew

Earlier Mac models

Posted on Aug 6, 2025 2:00 PM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Aug 14, 2025 4:36 PM

You're welcome.


And I totally understand your situation. My mother is the same way. And though she is well enough off that she doesn't have to be so frugal, her lifelong saving habits are too hard for her to break, God love her! 😃


Meanwhile, I wonder - how did you create your High Sierra bootable USB installer? Since it does not appear to actually boot the computer and install the OS, I suspect there was an error made.


If you're going to press on with this old iMac, if you can coax the iMac to boot into Internet recovery using Option-Command-R you may be offered the latest macOS that is compatible with your Mac - High Sierra.


Otherwise, the best way to reinstall macOS High Sierra will be to properly create and use a bootable installer. The problem with this is since the old iMac appears unable to load any OS, there is no way to use it to create a working bootable installer.


But if you can get your hands on another working Mac model that can run OS 10.13 High Sierra, you can create your bootable installer with that.


These Macs are compatible with High Sierra:

MacBook (Late 2009 or newer)

MacBook Pro (Mid 2010 or newer)

MacBook Air (Late 2010 or newer)

Mac mini (Mid 2010 or newer)

iMac (Late 2009 or newer)

Mac Pro (Mid 2010 or newer)


Note - in all instances above, "or newer" is generally limited to "thru late-2015", as anything newer cannot run HS. Any of these Macs can be used to create a bootable HS installer even if they aren't actually currently running that OS.


The High Sierra OS can be downloaded from the App Store using this link:  

https://apps.apple.com/app/macos-high-sierra/id1246284741


Once you've downloaded the High Sierra OS, you must properly process the downloaded file into a bootable USB installer. Apple’s guidance for that is here: Create a bootable installer for macOS - Apple Support



6 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Aug 14, 2025 4:36 PM in response to MattRA

You're welcome.


And I totally understand your situation. My mother is the same way. And though she is well enough off that she doesn't have to be so frugal, her lifelong saving habits are too hard for her to break, God love her! 😃


Meanwhile, I wonder - how did you create your High Sierra bootable USB installer? Since it does not appear to actually boot the computer and install the OS, I suspect there was an error made.


If you're going to press on with this old iMac, if you can coax the iMac to boot into Internet recovery using Option-Command-R you may be offered the latest macOS that is compatible with your Mac - High Sierra.


Otherwise, the best way to reinstall macOS High Sierra will be to properly create and use a bootable installer. The problem with this is since the old iMac appears unable to load any OS, there is no way to use it to create a working bootable installer.


But if you can get your hands on another working Mac model that can run OS 10.13 High Sierra, you can create your bootable installer with that.


These Macs are compatible with High Sierra:

MacBook (Late 2009 or newer)

MacBook Pro (Mid 2010 or newer)

MacBook Air (Late 2010 or newer)

Mac mini (Mid 2010 or newer)

iMac (Late 2009 or newer)

Mac Pro (Mid 2010 or newer)


Note - in all instances above, "or newer" is generally limited to "thru late-2015", as anything newer cannot run HS. Any of these Macs can be used to create a bootable HS installer even if they aren't actually currently running that OS.


The High Sierra OS can be downloaded from the App Store using this link:  

https://apps.apple.com/app/macos-high-sierra/id1246284741


Once you've downloaded the High Sierra OS, you must properly process the downloaded file into a bootable USB installer. Apple’s guidance for that is here: Create a bootable installer for macOS - Apple Support



Aug 7, 2025 5:43 AM in response to MattRA

Good on Matthew for introducing your “elderly” mother to a Mac. Good on her for having a go. Horses for courses as not everyone enjoys the latest trendy M1 Imac.


I am in the twilight of my life and have beautiful 27” IMac (16 years old) natively running High Sierra. Currently running a 27” IMac (10 years old) with Mojave, as smooth as. No problems with the latest up to date browser, the internet or software.


It would good if you could get a bootable external drive with High Sierra (or earlier) (not an installer) which you could either clone to the hard drive or at least test if the internal hard drive is still working.


See if you can find your local apple user group as someone might have such a bootable drive for you to try.


So I encourage you to continue to try and get this ‘old’ IMac to work. I hope you succeed and your mother has fun having a go.

Aug 6, 2025 2:26 PM in response to MattRA

I say this is the kindest way possible (for me 😉)... please don't foist this 14 (!) year old iMac on your elderly mother. You will be doing her no favor by saddling her with a Mac that is obsolete, unsupported in both hardware and software and unable to leverage any of the current secure protocols of the modern internet.


I understand the desire to save money, but the potential for troubles with this old Mac is high, as I suspect you are learning.


Any newer Mac that is no more than 5-6 years old can be used productively for at least another4-6 years, imho.

Don't buy any Mac from an unknown seller. There are too many easy ways to buy a Mac that will be no more than a door stop. Buy direct from Apple or other reputable resellers.

For example: Refurbished Mac Deals - Apple

Or New and Used Macs at macsales.com


Having said that, it does appear that the computer has been wiped, whether properly or improperly is difficult to say without additional sleuthing. But I suspect the failure of the High Sierra installation probably lies in the inability of the installer to contact the recovery server. It's a common problem these days and Apple is not likely to address it.

The good news is there is a workaround for that. Please see Fix #3 in this article for the details: https://mrmacintosh.com/how-to-fix-the-recovery-server-could-not-be-contacted-error-high-sierra-recovery-is-still-online-but-broken/



Aug 6, 2025 6:44 PM in response to MattRA

I couldn't agree more with D.I. Johnson:


... please don't foist this 14 (!) year old iMac on your elderly mother. You will be doing her no favor by saddling her with a Mac that is obsolete, unsupported in both hardware and software and unable to leverage any of the current secure protocols of the modern internet.


It may be unkind of me to put it this way, but it borders on elder abuse. Attempting to use that Mac even for simple and mundane tasks such as email will in nothing but frustration for you both.

Aug 14, 2025 7:09 PM in response to D.I. Johnson

Thanks for your ongoing support!


I can't recall how I created the bootable HS installer - I did it years ago, and do recall using it - however it certainly doesn't seem to work with the old iMac - in fact during one of the recent attempts to install, a dialog flashed up stating the "copy of the Install macOS High Sierra application is damaged....."


I'd like to try creating a new one - but the only Mac I have say access to is my only Mac : a 2021 M1 MacBook Pro. Your list above suggests this won't be able to create a new, bootable installer of HS..., as my MacBook is too new.


My sister has an old(ish) iMac - I'll see what vintage that is - perhaps it's old enough - but not too new!


Thanks again!



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Installing OSX on a 11 year old iMac

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