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Roscoe1's avatar
Roscoe1
Aspirant
Aug 05, 2018

Dead ReadyNAS...how to recover the data

Wrong category, but community doesn't have one for "My ReadyNAS just died".

 

I have a very old (8 years?) ReadyNAS NV+ that just died (no power whatsoever). Model description included in the pictures below.  Clearly I need to recover the data, looking for the most cost effective solution.  I don't intend to stay with a NAS solution as I can put everything on a much faster 6TB USB 3.0 drive significantly cheaper (even buying 2x for backup), so I just need a way to read off the contents. I tried contacting Netgear but all my registration data for this unit is missing (I replaced the chassis under warranty early in it's life so I know it was registered at some point) but given it's age I doubt there's anything they'll do for me.  I found somesimilar diskless units online, thought I might buy one of those and throw in the old drives.  Just can't be sure how compatible these units are (example).  Also hate to pay that kind of money for a one-time data recovery if there's a cheaper option...

 

I've seen links on these pages regarding a replacement PSU, but I can't be sure that will fix the problem so I'm afraid that might be a gamble.

 

Thoughts?

 

 

12 Replies

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  • Sorry for reviving an old thread.

     

    I had that issue, and by opening the NV+ I was able to plug  a normal PSU.

     

    It may help someone in the future.

    • Sandshark's avatar
      Sandshark
      Sensei

      The pin-out is non-standard, and this should never be done without an adapter cable.

  • Given the completely outrageous prices on those replacements, you would need to have some very valuable data before I'd recommend getting one.  You can find much more reasonable prices on used ones on eBay.  While you'd have no guarantee of how much life you might get from it, you'd likely be safe for long enough to recover the data.

     

    Another option is a temporary or permanent power supply replacement.  For simple recovery, the temporary option is probably your best plan.  While the ReadyNAS connection looks like a standard 20-pin ATX one, it is slightly modified.  The -5V and -12V connections are replaced with additional +12V to give more power for the drives.  A diagram is here: ReadyNAS_PSU_pinout.  It is pretty easy to take a 24 to 20 pin adapter/extender for an ATX power supply and wire it to do the swap.  Then use it externally with a standard supply long enough to recover the data.

     

    Alternately, replacement supplies are available (though also pricy), and a standard Flex ATX supply can be made to work internally, needing the pin swap plus doing something about the fan.

    • Roscoe1's avatar
      Roscoe1
      Aspirant
      Thanks...but I looked on eBay. My model wasn’t available and as I couldn’t be sure that my drives could be read by other models I feel that's a gamble.
      • mdgm-ntgr's avatar
        mdgm-ntgr
        NETGEAR Employee Retired

        Were you using X-RAID?

         

        There is a method to attempt to recover data using an ordinary x86 Linux PC. We use software RAID. There would also be some software for Windows (though probably not free) that could do it.

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