Most people will tell you to go the boot camp route, but I've found that the UEFI method results in MUCH quicker boot time. Reboot and let the installer finish the windows install. Format the drive/create partitions, allow install to finish. Installer to ensure your hardware is supported. Need to have a windows equivalent driver that you load via the Run into issues with the installer detecting the hard drive. If you are able to get into the Windows install prompt, then you may If your macbook does not boot into the windows install screen, then you need to figure This step is highly dependent on what happens next. The bootloader should detect a Windows USB disk. Insert the USB drive and hold down option. I believe you have done this, so it should be ok.Ĭreate a USB install of Windows 10 that is UEFI compatible. GPT is a disklabel not a formatting type. Here is a rough outline of what you need to do: I've managed to do this quite a few times (albeit keeping macOS without boot camp).
This is also treading along as unsupported but if you want to get your hands dirty it is an EXTREMELY good learning experience. However, have you tried a fully UEFI Windows 10 install? Your update does not detail very much so it is important to possibly include pics since command line output will be limited preinstall. Most people are going to assume that you are going the boot camp route.