NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.

Forum Discussion

Lightmancer's avatar
Lightmancer
Aspirant
Oct 13, 2016
Solved

Readynas 102 - How do I access the drives?

Let me begin by saying I am a COMPLETE NOVICE in these matters.  I bought a Readynas 102 because it seemed to be "plug and play" - clearly not.   PLEASE ASSUME THAT I AM NON-TECHNICAL IN ANY RESPON...
  • StephenB's avatar
    Oct 13, 2016

    Lightmancer wrote:

     

     

    Please help. I have wasted hours trying to make head or tail of the "advice" given in other threads, none of which seem to address my specific problem and all of which leave me standing in technical terms within the first sentence...

      


    Not sure if this will help...

     

    Your original setup (1 TB + 3 TB) will only give you 1 TB of storage, not 4 TB.

     

    The NAS uses a disk mirroring technique called RAID-1, which keeps the two disks in sync.  Everything written to disk 1 is also written to disk 2.  Then if one disk fails, the data is still available on the other.

     

    This redundancy comes at a price - the total space available is (in general) the sum of the disks minus the largest disk.  In your case (only two disks) this becomes the smaller of the two drives installed.  So 1 TB total, not 4 TB.

     

    The easiest way for you to proceed is to purchase a new 3 TB drive and replace drive 1.  The NAS will expand your space to 3 TB (still providing you protection from a single disk failure).  If you go this route, I recommend either a WD30EFRX (western digital "Red") or an ST3000VN000 (seagate "Ironman").  Both drives are intended for NAS use.  I use western digital myself.

     

    The second option is to 

    (a) uninstall any apps

    (b) switch to flexraid

    (c) delete the data volume (losing the backups on it)

    (d) create two new data volumes (one for each disk)

     

    This will give you all 4 TB of space, but no redunduncy.  You'd then create shares on both volumes, and set up the backup program on the PC to back up to the share you want.

     

    The second option is more work for you, and can be more confusing to manage.  So I'd recommend the first option.

     

     

     

NETGEAR Academy

Boost your skills with the Netgear Academy - Get trained, certified and stay ahead with the latest Netgear technology! 

Join Us!

ProSupport for Business

Comprehensive support plans for maximum network uptime and business peace of mind.

 

Learn More