willwills90 Posted January 16, 2016 Share Posted January 16, 2016 (edited) hey guys, my systems been down for a while, but ive changed to a cpu that doesnt need a fake cpu id, the 4790k, anyway, i get this kernel panic, ive tried repairing disk and volume to no luck, any help greatly appreciated! http://imgur.com/8RwvtuU specs: ga-z97x-sli i7-4790k sapphire r9 280x oc 3gb 8gb kingston fury racorsair cx600 psu 250gb wd (mac) 1tb wd (windows, also dead lol) thanks alot, will Pick an appropriate title and tags (if any) for your post. A good title makes it easier to find what you are looking for. Using informative tags allows for improved searching of related topics. Your topic does not deserve any more attention than others seeking help hence topic titles must reflect their content, and topic titles containing things like: 'please help' 'look here' 'cash reward' 'urgent' or other inaccurate descriptions will be removed. This includes all-caps titles. Edited January 16, 2016 by fantomas1 Please, take a look!!! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Codinger Posted January 16, 2016 Share Posted January 16, 2016 Looks like your DSDT has wrong things for your cpu Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
willwills90 Posted January 16, 2016 Author Share Posted January 16, 2016 Looks like your DSDT has wrong things for your cpu is there a way to make a dsdt without being in the system Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Codinger Posted January 16, 2016 Share Posted January 16, 2016 is there a way to make a dsdt without being in the systemInstall Clover on USB and than Boot your clover from USB and press F4. Now put it into another Mac Mount EFI and go to clover acpi origin and try your luck Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
willwills90 Posted January 16, 2016 Author Share Posted January 16, 2016 the only other pc i have access to has ubuntu on it i can get into recover though, anything i can do in terminal? ive removed the DSDT in terminal, still getting a kernel panic Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Allan Posted January 16, 2016 Share Posted January 16, 2016 hey guys, my systems been down for a while, but ive changed to a cpu that doesnt need a fake cpu id, the 4790k, anyway, i get this kernel panic, ive tried repairing disk and volume to no luck You must understand that Hackintosh is not plug-and-play like in PC + Windows. If you have problems to delete DSDT, i recommend you create a new partition with your USB installation, and install OS X in there. Now, for you avoid unnecessary work, with this new OS X installed, you can access the other OS X partition (where was the old DSDT), and delete the current DSDT and patch a new DSDT. And if you use a SSDT for power management, you need create a new. After install the new DSDT, you need rebuild the disk cache and permissions. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
zeppfrog Posted January 16, 2016 Share Posted January 16, 2016 also try using -f -F and or UseKernelCache=No with -x. You may be able to get past caches and into safe mode that way. You will probably need other flags such as cpus= busratio= npci= PCIRootUID= or some combination. If you don't have another way to access, this might get you in the door Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Allan Posted January 16, 2016 Share Posted January 16, 2016 The bad news in use Safe Mode, is that can't mount EFI partition - If he uses UEFI Clover of course Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
J Lamp Posted January 17, 2016 Share Posted January 17, 2016 If your Windows is also dead you should start with resetting the CMOS. I encountered this recently with a Gigabyte board not correctly picking up a replaced processor. If your functioning Windows partition isn't booting either (even in safe mode) it's something to do with the new hardware. After that I've found Clover has gotten so good that you should be able to boot with just FakeSMC and possibly (though it may not be necessary) a CPU Power Management disabler. That should at least get you into your OS X install, but only after the hardware issue is sorted out. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
willwills90 Posted January 17, 2016 Author Share Posted January 17, 2016 hey guys, Thanks for all your help! anyway, managed to boot in safe mode last night, then it booted totally fine, went to boot in 5 minutes ago, back to the same old kernel panic, and i do know how hackintosh works, ive been doing them since snow leopard, also, this may help, if i boot verbose there is no panic, but if i dont boot verbose, there is, anywya, heres a video of the panic https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=INEnRqOBbg0 wathc in 1080 if you want to read the panic. thanks again, Will Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Codinger Posted January 17, 2016 Share Posted January 17, 2016 also try using -f -F and or UseKernelCache=No with -x. You may be able to get past caches and into safe mode that way. You will probably need other flags such as cpus= busratio= npci= PCIRootUID= or some combination. If you don't have another way to access, this might get you in the door He uses Clover Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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