NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.
Forum Discussion
Jim_Norman
Nov 30, 2022Aspirant
How to use a disk from one RD526 in another RD526?
I have two RD526-6 NASs with 6 10TB disks in each one. I want to replace 4 of the disks in each with 16TB disks. Some of the disks in NAS 1 are not that old and I would like to use one of them as a...
- Dec 01, 2022
Jim_Norman wrote:
If I simply plug it in, I am concerned that NAS 2 will not know what to do with it since it already contains configuration info.
That could happen, especially since both NAS are using the same volume name.
If you can connect the disk to a Windows PC (either using SATA or a USB adapter/dock), then you can unformat using the windows disk manager (removing all "volumes" - partitions really - that are on the disk). Then the disk will appear blank to the NAS, so you can simply hot-swap it.
A similar approach is to reformat it in a PC (either Mac or Windows). If you do that, then you will need to format it again on the NAS after you hot swap - OS-6 won't automatically add a disk that is already formatted to the array.
If this isn't possible, then you could do a factory reset on one of the NAS with only the disk that you want to migrate inserted. Power down, remove the disks (labeling them so you can restore them to the same slots), and power up with only the one disk installed. Go through the initial setup, and then destroy the data volume. After that, power down, restore the original disks, and power up.
StephenB
Dec 01, 2022Guru - Experienced User
Jim_Norman wrote:
If I simply plug it in, I am concerned that NAS 2 will not know what to do with it since it already contains configuration info.
That could happen, especially since both NAS are using the same volume name.
If you can connect the disk to a Windows PC (either using SATA or a USB adapter/dock), then you can unformat using the windows disk manager (removing all "volumes" - partitions really - that are on the disk). Then the disk will appear blank to the NAS, so you can simply hot-swap it.
A similar approach is to reformat it in a PC (either Mac or Windows). If you do that, then you will need to format it again on the NAS after you hot swap - OS-6 won't automatically add a disk that is already formatted to the array.
If this isn't possible, then you could do a factory reset on one of the NAS with only the disk that you want to migrate inserted. Power down, remove the disks (labeling them so you can restore them to the same slots), and power up with only the one disk installed. Go through the initial setup, and then destroy the data volume. After that, power down, restore the original disks, and power up.
Related Content
NETGEAR Academy
Boost your skills with the Netgear Academy - Get trained, certified and stay ahead with the latest Netgear technology!
Join Us!