Open verdazil opened 4 months ago
Hi. I haven't been using this system in quite some time. As far as the disk issues are concerned, you could try disabling NVMeFixuf.kext and see if this changes anything
Hi. I haven't been using this system in quite some time. As far as the disk issues are concerned, you could try disabling NVMeFixuf.kext and see if this changes anything
Unfortunately, this does not change the behavior of the system...
Hi!
My very similar build:
MB: Gigabyte Z490 VISION G (BIOS F22) CPU: Intel® Core™ i5-10600, 3.3-4.8 GHz Memory: Corsair Vengeance LPX 32 Gb (4 x 8 Gb) 2800 MHz DDR4 Video: Sapphire Nitro+ Radeon RX 590 (8Gb) + Intel UHD 630 Monitor: BENQ-BL2711U + LG TV 42LF650V SSD: NVMe M.2 PCIe 4.0 Netac, 1.0 Tb SSD: Kingston A400 SSD, 240.1 Gb + Transcend SSD220 SSD, 240.1 Gb + Samsung SSD 870 EVO 250.1 Gb HDD: WDC WD20PURZ-85AKKY0 2.0 Tb X 2 WiFi+Bluetooth: Fenvi FV-T919 BCM94360CD (Apple Broadcom BCM4360 WMA + BCM2046B1) (OCLP for Sonoma) macOS version: Sonoma 14.3.1
Problems and solutions
I was only able to get working LAN and WiFi by setting Kernel --> Quirks ---> DisableIoMapper = YES
Starting from version Sonoma macOS 14.4, if I restart the computer, the power to the HDD hard drives is turns off. Then, during the BIOS POST, power is turned on to the disks and they spin up one by one. This means longer reboot time, increased disk wear, and simply incorrect behavior. I couldn't solve this problem, so I'm staying with the version Sonoma macOS 14.3.1.