MacBoy27 wrote:
Excellent.. thank you for the info.
How can I instal Monterey on an external drive whilst still having Mojave on my Mac? I would have thought that when I turn on the laptop it would go and boot from the Mojave as its already on the machine?
If you have multiple startup volumes, there are two ways to select which one to start up from.'
- Use the Startup Disk control panel in System Preferences to choose a default startup drive. I believe that is what it would be called in Mojave, and perhaps also in Monterey. Apple shuffled things around in Ventura: on my machine, System Preferences is called System Settings, and the Startup Disk controls are buried within the General control panel. But wherever it is in Mojave and in Monterey, it will be there.
- When powering up or resetting the Mac, hold down the Option (⌥) or Alt key. On Intel-based Macs, this will bring up the Startup Manager and let you select a different startup volume at boot time.
Reference: Mac startup key combinations - Apple Support
What would be the process for Installing Monterey on an external drive, then getting the Mac to boot from it and also install updates on my machine as it still has Mojave in its system?
For a clean install:
Format the external drive using the GUID partition scheme, and the APFS (non-case-sensitive) filesystem. Then when you run the Monterey installer, there should be a screen asking where you want to install the system. Just pick the external drive.
If you like, once you have Monterey on the external drive and have booted from that drive, you can run Migration Assistant, using the internal drive as the startup disk from which to "migrate".
Or:
Format the external drive using the GUID partition scheme, and the APFS (non-case-sensitive) filesystem. Then clone your Mojave drive to it, using Carbon Copy Cloner or SuperDuper! After checking that the backup worked, and that the external drive is bootable, install Monterey "in place" on the external drive, over top of Mojave.
Last but not least.. today I replaced the M.B internal battery pack as the existing one had inflated like a balloon.. no wonder the Mac seemed to get through a charge pretty quickly !!
The process is quite delicate and laborious and took about 1.30 hours and lots of foul language...but I don't give up easily. 100% success!!
It's good that you got rid of the swollen battery pack. When lithium batteries go bad, they become a fire hazard.