Click on Finder in the menu bar at the top of your screen. However, I'm certain that I need to delete the existing Clover installation, remove it completely and do a fresh install. Hover on the Dock at the bottom of your screen and open Finder.
I could now try to reinstall the OS, or do a clean install onto my SSD. 've now got back to the stage where I can boot the system from a freshly made Sierra Unibeast USB stick. But it seems to create chaos and confusion within the whole boot regime. Sorry if this isn't the correct forum, but I couldn't find where else to raise this question.īackground: I think the reason for the problems with Clover has been my attempts to duplicate a working config file and then rename it. Is there a correct way of removing Clover from an SSD / hard drive and doing a clean install of Clover?Īnd does that require a clean install of the OS as well? Or might I get away with a reinstall of the OS? The thing is, I already tried that once and not only did it send me back into a spiral of an unbootable system, it also messed up my working Unibeast stick (hence the need for a fresh one). That sounds like it should be easy: mount the EFI partition, delete the relevant folder, and then maybe replace it with one that you know works. However, I'm certain that I need to delete the existing Clover installation, remove it completely and do a fresh install. I've now got back to the stage where I can boot the system from a freshly made Sierra Unibeast USB stick.
After much research and countless reboots, I've decided the problem was, and is, a corruption (or something) of Clover. I've been having serious problems with my system, which was running fine, but then became completely unbootable. Building a CustoMac Hackintosh: Buyer's Guide