
Now, this is where I was briefly disappointed: the Mbox 2 Pro appeared in System Report under Firewire, but it did not appear in the Preferences panel, nor MIDI Audio Setup.

The installation continued after a couple of minutes, and then the system restarted. I opened it and pressed the button that appeared there to approve the driver. During installation, there was a security alert saying that I needed to approve the driver in System Preferences > Security & Privacy. I will describe what I did in order to get it working:įirst, I plugged in the Mbox 2 Pro and then installed the Legacy 10.3.3 driver. This way your bios settings will match.I am not OP, but I received a used Mbox 2 Pro today and managed to get it running on macOS 10.13.4 High Sierra. It is probably in Legacy mode so stay away from UEFi mode when creating your macOS install. IF your windows is setup in Legacy mode make sure to choose Legacy mode for your macOS setup and use the 64drivers package and make sure to choose the grub drivers. All of these have worked for me with no major issues. SanDisk is a good value to quality brand, Kingston, Crucial, Toshiba, Plextor (low price), and of course the best but you pay for it Samsung. I recently bought 2 120gb Inland Professional SSDs for $30 US each at Micro Center they are the most affordable drives I've ever seen. I have used numerous brands of SSDs and they have all worked in macOS. It may be easier to keep your Windows on the HDD and try the SSD for macOS.

I also have a TP Link AC1300 which works native in OS but needed drivers for Windows but it works great for both with AC dual band power. I have a few Tp link N900 pcie wifi cards that don't need any fixes and they work natively in Windows and macOS.
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The wifi card may work it was reported working in Mavericks but it needed kext patches so its not a beginner type setup. Building a CustoMac Hackintosh: Buyer's Guide
