![]() If you don't want to mess with Terminal, Tim Perfitt of TwoCanoes software made a free Recovery Selector utility that'll do it for you.Įither way, restart, and it should start in Internet Recovery mode without any keys. You can do this by hand in the Terminal utility, with the command: sudo usr/sbin/nvram internet-recovery-mode=RecoveryModeNetworkĮnter your admin password when prompted (it won't echo). (Normally, you could hold Option at startup, and then select it but having Shift stuck down seems to prevent this.) Option 2: Select recovery mode with an NVRAM setting Choose Macintosh HD (or what the Mac drive is named), then select. Once in Recovery Mode and at the macOS Utilities (or OS X Utilities) screen, select Disk Utility. When that's finished, select that drive in System Preferences -> Startup Disk, and restart. Reboot the Mac and right after the boot chime sound, hold down the Apple Silicon: POWER BUTTON or Intel: COMMAND R keys together to boot into Recovery Mode. ![]() In summary, download the macOS installer application from the Mac App Store, plug in a flash drive that can be erased (because it will be), and run something like: sudo /Applications/Install\ macOS\ Big\ Sur.app/Contents/Resources/createinstallmedia -volume /Volumes/MyVolumeĮnter your admin password when prompted (it won't echo), and follow the prompts. See Apple Support Document HT201372: "How to create a bootable installer for macOS" for full instructions. ![]() So I recommend at least starting the first option. The second option is probably simplest (if nothing goes wrong), but if it doesn't work, having an installer drive (first option) will give you a lot more options.
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