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I have a MacBook Pro late 2011 with Thunderbolt booted into Target Disk Mode, as well as a Gigabyte motherboard model number GA-Z77X-UP4 TH running Windows 7. The MBP has two internal disks formatted for Mac OS X. The two are connected via a Thunderbolt cable - not a displayport cable (though I did try that).
I am trying to access the internal disks' partitions of the MBP from Windows Explorer, though currently they do not show up.
Things I have already done:
- Installed drivers on the Windows side (MacDrive 9)
- Installed the chipset drivers from the Gigabyte product site
- Intel IME
- Intel IMF
- Procured an Apple Thunderbolt cable
- Formatted a portion of one of the two internal disks in FAT and NTFS
Does anyone have any suggestions on what to do next?
I have a couple Thunderbolt -> Firewire adapters at work. I can check for you on Monday if this setup works. – Alex Plumb – 2013-01-20T03:25:21.980
I checked three different permutations this morning:
Of those, only #3 worked. It was also the only option that had any device drivers install or try to install. This was under a Sandy Bridge iMac running Windows 7. The Target Disk iMac was another Sandy Bridge iMac. – Alex Plumb – 2013-01-21T13:21:28.213
Another thing I'm really curious about is whether you can access a Target Disk mac as part of a thunderbolt daisy chain. For instance, you connect the target disk mac to a cinema display or a pegasus/lacie device and then to the windows computer. Would it work then? Alternatively, if you're looking for speed, you could get a thunderbolt hub and put your VMs on that. Another suggestion if you're looking for more speed than Firewire 800 is to connect both devices to a gigabit ethernet network. – Alex Plumb – 2013-01-22T16:49:51.273
I've edited my answer above to include our findings as well as some additional research that I've performed. – Alex Plumb – 2013-01-24T16:56:02.350