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Forum Discussion
UmbraSilentium
Apr 04, 2025Aspirant
ReadyNas Unreachable
Hey everyone! I have a quite old, hand me down of a ReadyNas, I believe it is the RNDP4000-100NAS. Recently, I have been having connection issues out of the blue. From the CMD on my personal pc, ...
UmbraSilentium
Apr 04, 2025Aspirant
Appreciate the quick reply!
I'll do a restart and test it out on the second port, we'll see if it happens after a bit of time. When plugged into the first port (LAN1 for any future conversations), the Ethernet port is solid green with a blinking amber. Proper shutdown also doesn't function, that being a single press, followed by another single press to confirm shutdown. I have to press and hold power button for the unit to fully shut off.
I only have the one switch, it's the Netgear GS308, seemingly haven't had any issues with it thus far.
The location it's in shouldn't be getting hot as far as I can tell. It's in an office, but it's not directly up against anything, nor is it unable to get proper airflow.
Sandshark
Apr 05, 2025Sensei - Experienced User
Do try the other port. You may also want to try another port on the switch, though a totally separate switch is better, especially if the one it's currently connected to is "green".
But, proper shut-down also not working is usually a sign that the +5VSB (5 Volt Standby) power is not properly functioning. It powers the on/off and NIC circuitry and is always on, even when the NAS is off, which makes it often the first to fail. Almost always, a power supply replacement will fix it, if that is the issue. It sounds like yours may be getting poorly regulated the more it heats up. The fact that you can ping it does make this diagnosis a lot more questionable, though.
Be aware that while the power connector looks like a standard ATX 20-pin one, it's wired slightly differently. You can modify a standard Flex ATX (aka mini ITX) supply, but the price of pre-modified ones has gotten reasonable enough that that's not what I typically recommend any more. You can also create an adapter cable to externally connect a standard ATX supply (if you already have one) just to see if that fixes the issue.
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