MacPro early 2009 (4.1) can't/doesn't want to boot

This Mac is special — I have a Mac Pro Early 2009 with dual CPUs. It boots, but only when it feels like it.


A few months ago, I figured out why it wasn’t starting: a component was shorting everything. After removing that part, it finally booted.


Yesterday, I tried to boot it again to install the latest supported macOS (El Capitan). I managed to update one of the systems, but the second one wouldn’t boot (i have two MacPro). To troubleshoot, I disassembled the machine and tested the parts outside the case, plugging the main board into the processor board with the PSU. Nothing happened.


Feeling disappointed, I reassembled everything back into the case — and it booted! But now, once again, it refuses to boot. I don’t want to keep disassembling and reassembling it, hoping it will eventually work.


What worries me most is the PSU: it makes a whistling or high-pitched noise, almost like it’s charging up to handle the boot sequence. It seems odd that the PSU could be failing, since yesterday I was able to restart the Mac multiple times without issue.


So I need help deciding: should I just buy a replacement PSU on eBay for about €100 (~$117–120), or should I keep investigating other possible causes?


For context, here’s what I’ve already tried:


  • Resetting the BIOS, PGOOD, SYS, and SMC using the pins on the main board
  • Reseating each RAM stick
  • Reseating the two CPUs on the processor board
  • Reconnecting every cable


I’d appreciate any advice on what to do next.

Mac Pro, OS X 10.11

Posted on Sep 29, 2025 9:30 AM

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Posted on Sep 30, 2025 11:18 AM

There are some LEDS on the backplane board that show whether voltages are OK. Towards the left side, just over halfway up. Standby power is an always-on power supply that MUST be present to allow staring up.


The approved method for your debugging is almost exactly what you did before. That is, remove everything in a slot, including all drives and DVD readers and PCIe slot cards, and go for the Chime. Then add back one item at a time, and when it fails, it's the last component you added.


Are you getting any "help me" codes from the power-on indicator light?


What graphics card are you using?

16 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Sep 30, 2025 11:18 AM in response to UnVeluX

There are some LEDS on the backplane board that show whether voltages are OK. Towards the left side, just over halfway up. Standby power is an always-on power supply that MUST be present to allow staring up.


The approved method for your debugging is almost exactly what you did before. That is, remove everything in a slot, including all drives and DVD readers and PCIe slot cards, and go for the Chime. Then add back one item at a time, and when it fails, it's the last component you added.


Are you getting any "help me" codes from the power-on indicator light?


What graphics card are you using?

Sep 30, 2025 2:55 PM in response to UnVeluX

That tells you the overtemp lamp test circuit is working, and it has the standby power needed to start up from the button.


if the [12 Volt powered] fans won't go even with no cards in slots and no drives connected, it very well may be the power supply.


I would suggest you try swapping the CPU tray with the other machine to make sure it seems to be working.

It would also tell you all your Error-correcting RAM is working (or not). If that works, there is not much else that can go wrong except the power supply.


If you want to be certain, you could swap your known-good power supply into the dead machine. It seems onerous, but the cable harnesses are fairly well-behaved and it does not take that long. Or you could swap the suspect power supply into the otherwise known-good machine. If the problems follow the power supply, you know it's bad.


¿Which would require the fewest swaps or the shortest downtime?

Sep 30, 2025 12:13 PM in response to UnVeluX

if the fans turn on, but no progress, any "help-me" codes are blinked in the MAIN power indicator, or the OUTSIDE front of the unit.


The GT120 card does not use any Aux power cords, which makes things simpler. That card could also be placed in ANY PCIe slot -- it will just run slower in the top slots, but it will happily run.



[Edited by Moderator]

Oct 2, 2025 1:49 PM in response to Grant Bennet-Alder

Oooh, U meant the PSU, but why sell a broken or very badly one ? And i was thinking about transforming the mac into a real PC, transforming the psu by replacing the internals and putting inside a mini-atx or ITX and re-routing the graphic card PCIe lane and IO of the case to the main board. If i don't wana replace the PSU. but doign a pc inside woudl be in some time. But im thinking about it now that ik that the PSU is faulty

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MacPro early 2009 (4.1) can't/doesn't want to boot

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