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Forum Discussion
youbecha
Jun 08, 2016Aspirant
External USB drive to back up 6TB ReadyNAS NV+ V1
I have a Raid-X setup in a Readynas NV+ V1 with 4 2TB drives holding approx 6TB of data. I want to back it up to an external USB drive. I got a Seagate USB3.0 8TB drive, but so far I can't ge...
StephenB
Jun 08, 2016Guru - Experienced User
youbecha wrote:
I have a Raid-X setup in a Readynas NV+ V1 with 4 2TB drives holding approx 6TB of data.
I want to back it up to an external USB drive.
I got a Seagate USB3.0 8TB drive, but so far I can't get the Readynas to see the file system...it sees the drive, just no file system.
That is because the NV+ v1 doesn't support GPT drives (internal or external). So it is limited to 2 TB USB drives.
youbecha wrote:
...I am attempting to back up the drive, via the network, to a eSATA raid plugged into my desktop computer....you can imagine how quick that is.
Actually that is the fastest way to do it. The NV+ v1 transfers the files much more quickly over the network than it can write to USB drives - especially if the drive is formatted using NTFS.
The main challenge is making sure everything is transferred with no errors. You could use robocopy or teracopy (with verification) - though that will be somewhat slower than drag+drop. You could also share the drive, and use an NV+ backup job.
- youbechaJun 09, 2016AspirantYes I am using a network share. It is interesting that it can crate a 8TB raid, but cannot access a single drive larger than 2TB...almost makes the ability to hook up an external drive for backup purposes useless.
- StephenBJun 09, 2016Guru - Experienced User
youbecha wrote:
It is interesting that it can crate a 8TB raid, but cannot access a single drive larger than 2TB...almost makes the ability to hook up an external drive for backup purposes useless.Agreed. It's not an issue for me anymore, since my NV+ backs up my pro (and doesn't need to be backed up itself).
The core product goes back to ~2007-2008 and pre-dates GPT drives. I think the largest available drives at the time were 1 TB, maybe even less. There's been some debate here on whether the v1 hardware is capable of supporting GPT or not, but at the end of the day, Netgear didn't add it.
Of course none of the current ReadyNAS have this limitation.
- BrianL2Jun 10, 2016NETGEAR Employee Retired
Hi youbecha,
I believe it only supports up to 2TB capacity for an external USB hard drive and you're lucky if a 3TB works fine. I totally agree with what StephenB have said.
Kind regards,
BrianL
NETGEAR Community Team
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