OpenCore macOS Ventura 13.6.4 Intel & AMD Kurulum İmajı

Actually, previous guide that you followed seems not to be the wrong (at least as I can see); but if you have any device that has MacOS right now I highly recommend you to use this ones as guide (because they are legit from Apple):
https://support.apple.com/en-asia/102662 (for installing the installer)
https://support.apple.com/en-asia/101578 (for making bootable installer, you can also flash this to your SSD if it's not your boot drive)

But if you don't have any MacOS working devices, I'm just going to use this article and I'm going to translate it for you to make Hackintosh:

Getting the Installer:

For installing images (also He's giving them as RAW file on his site, not DMG): https://direct.yusufk.tr/imajlar (if you get an error about limit exceeded you can use this to solve: Yes I know not the same video but does the same, original video was Turkish)
Those images does not include any EFI; use the EFI provided below: https://direct.yusufk.tr/efiler
He was also given After Install apps for making thinks smooth, theirs links are also: https://yusufk.tr/hackintosh-kurulum-sonrasinda-gerekli-araclar/

(I just used AI for translating from there but I also checked those prompts for misleading information so I'm sure about the info, I know I'm being lazy here but hey It's doing way better than me)

BIOS Settings (Intel)

Before you begin, reset your BIOS settings to their default values (Load Default Settings).

Disable:

  • Fast Boot
  • Secure Boot
  • Serial/COM Port
  • Parallel Port
  • CSM (If you experience screen glitches while this is enabled, try enabling it.)
  • Thunderbolt
  • Intel SGX
  • Intel Platform Trust
  • CFG Lock (MSR 0xE2 write protection) – Must be disabled. If you’ve disabled it, also disable AppleXcpmCfgLockunder config -> Kernel -> Quirks. If you can’t find the CFG-Lock setting, you don’t need to change anything.)
Enable:

  • VT-x
  • VT-d
  • Above 4G Decoding
  • Hyper-Threading
  • Execute Disable Bit
  • EHCI/XHCI Hand-off
  • OS Type: UEFI Mode
  • DVMT Pre-Allocated (iGPU Memory): 64MB
  • SATA Mode: AHCI

BIOS Settings (AMD Ryzen)
Before you begin, reset your BIOS settings to their default values (Load Default Settings).

Disable:

  • Fast Boot
  • Secure Boot
  • Serial/COM Port
  • Parallel Port
  • CSM (This option can cause GPU-related errors like gIO. If you experience such issues, disable it.)
Note for 3990X Users:
macOS currently does not support more than 64 threads in the kernel. Since the 3990X has 128 threads, half of them need to be disabled. In such cases, it’s recommended to disable Hyper-Threading in the BIOS.

Enable:

  • Above 4G Decoding (Must be enabled. If your BIOS doesn’t have this setting, add npci=0x2000 to the boot-argsin your config. Do not use the npci argument if Above 4G is enabled.)
    • Note for Gigabyte/Aorus and AsRock users: This option may cause certain drivers (e.g., Ethernet) to stop working or prevent other OSes from booting. If that happens, disable this setting and use the npci boot argument instead.
    • BIOS Notes (2020+): Enabling Above 4G may also activate Resizable BAR support on some X570 or newer motherboards. Make sure Resizable BAR is set to Disabled, not Auto.
  • EHCI/XHCI Hand-off
  • OS Type: Windows 8.1/10 UEFI Mode
  • SATA Mode: AHCI

Note: Not all systems have the exact same BIOS settings. Apply the ones that are available on your system.

IMPORTANT:
If you're using LEGACY boot, first try to boot without modifying the default boot file in the EFI partition.

  • If it doesn’t boot, rename the boot file that matches your CPU architecture to boot and try again.
  • If that still doesn’t work, rename the boot9 file to boot.
  • You can rename the original boot file to boot-default or simply delete it—it doesn’t matter.
If instead of the OpenCore screen you see a gray BIOS interface, follow this path:
Boot Maintenance > Boot from file > [Your USB’s EFI partition] > EFI > OC > OpenCore.efi and press Enter.

(he was also told about MD5 check but I'm gonna skip them because its obvious from the screenshots)

Writing the Image to a USB Drive

Download and open the balenaEtcher program.

  • Click the "Flash from file" button on the left and select the .raw file you extracted from the ZIP.
  • Click "Select target" in the middle and choose your USB drive.
  • Press the "Flash!" button. Confirm any prompts if they appear.
  • Once it says "Completed," unplug and replug your USB drive.
  • If a warning appears saying the partition is unreadable or corrupted, simply ignore or cancel it.
  • When you open This PC (My Computer), a new partition named EFI should be visible.

Transferring EFI and Choosing the Correct Config for Your System
From the two ZIP files you downloaded, move the extracted folders into the EFI partition.

  • If you're on a UEFI system, you can delete the files named boot (used for legacy booting).
Inside the EFI/OC folder, you will notice there is no config.plist file.

  • Instead, go to EFI/OC/config where you’ll find .plist files tailored for different CPU families and system types.
  • Based on your CPU and motherboard, choose the appropriate .plist file, copy it to the OC folder, and rename it to config.plist.

If you’re installing Sonoma on a CPU with only SSE4.1 support, follow these steps:

  • Go to EFI/OC/Kexts and integrate the telemetrap.kext into your config file before starting the installation.
  • Example video: Kext Editing https://vk.com/video749455540_456239017
    (If the “Plugin” folder shown in the video doesn’t exist in your case, just use the available file.)

From here, it will be just doing standard MacOS Install. If you need any help, just tell me from here. I hope the translation will help you. I used AI for translating and I checked the prompt myself for correcting and adjustments.
 
@moneymoon
Thanks for your detail response.
But (I hope you understand what I mean):
  • I want to tell you that I have a Samsung NVMe SSD (with Windows installed) and a Kingston SSD (empty).
  • I want to install a macOS (Hackintosh) installer on the Kingston SSD (the Samsung SSD is not involved).
  • After using Etcher to create the installer with a .RAW file from this link (https://yusufk.tr/hackintosh-kurulumu-icin-imajlar/), my SSD automatically switched to the MBR format (not GPT). This prevents me from installing macOS on the partition (highlighted in red in the illustration below) because macOS does not allow installation on an MBR-formatted partition. (Although I do see the "Install macOS ..." option when booting from OpenCore EFI and reaching the macOS partition selection screen.)
  • If I use Etcher to create the installer from a .DMG file, when booting from OpenCore EFI, the "Install macOS..." option does not appear.

 
Son düzenleme:
Actually I'm not sure how can you solve this but if understood this right you need to have Hybrid partition table on your Kingston SSD or maybe trying to install the MacOS installer on your SSD via (https://sourceforge.net/projects/win32diskimager/) app and than make it bootable with your EFI and it'll work. I'm really confused with all of them

I'm not sure this is the best approach but I have an idea that I know it works (because I did it back in the day, with bit tinkering I was using 120 GB HDD for installing bunch of MacOS versions like Mavericks, Mountain Leon etc.), you can use VmWare etc for use the MacOS as Virtual Machine and from there you can connect your Kingston SSD to that VM and than you can easily do Apple's own method (https://support.apple.com/en-us/101578) for burning the image on SSD and installing actual OS on your hardware. I know using MacOS from VM was and is a headache but it seems to me it will be easier than solving all of this (at least I don't have any idea for solution right now).
 
Son düzenleme:
Thank you so much.
Very detail.
 
@moneymoon
But I still don't quite understand why, when creating a macOS installer using a .DMG file (and then copying the EFI folder to the SSD), the 'Install macOS...' option doesn't appear, whereas it does when using a RAW file.
 
@moneymoon
But I still don't quite understand why, when creating a macOS installer using a .DMG file (and then copying the EFI folder to the SSD), the 'Install macOS...' option doesn't appear, whereas it does when using a RAW file.
I also have no idea why this is happening, because it doesn't seem like it's trying to boot from the original boot drive or its partition. It seems to me that it's more likely a problem with burning the macOS image from Windows, rather than an issue with using the entire SSD for MacOS Installer. I hope that method will just solve it.

Sanal makineye kurulabiliyor mu?
Farklı ayarlamalara ihtiyacınız var bu haliyle kurulmayacaktır, yine bu foruma ait olan bir içerik bırakayım yardımcı olur:
 
Yapay zekaya danıştığımda OSX-KVM reposunu önerdi, sorun yaşadım ama ilerleyen günlerde sorunlarımın çözümü için uğraşacağım, tek üzücü kısım amd ekran kartım olmadığı için donanım hızlandırmam olmayacak, yoksa gpu passthrough yapar birebir'e yakın macOS deneyimi yaşardım da...
 
Ekran kartınıza göre yapabilirsiniz, şu şekilde atayım: https://dortania.github.io/GPU-Buyers-Guide/
 
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