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GR8JAB's avatar
GR8JAB
Initiate
Apr 16, 2019
Solved

RN104 vertical expansion with previously formatted disk

Hi All,

 

I've got a RN104 using X-RAID.  I'm doing a vertical expansion, and currently am 3TB+3TB+3TB+2TB.

 

I plan to replace the 2TB drive with another almost new 3TB drive I have.  My only problem is that it was previously used on another RN104.  I do not want/need the data on the drive.

 

How do I use this drive?  Do I have to format it before swapping with the 2TB drive?  Can I swap it and then format and then resync/expand?

 

Little help please.

  • Retired_Member's avatar
    Retired_Member
    Apr 16, 2019

    Hi GR8JAB , to be on the safe side I would remove all partitions from the disk before inserting it into the nas. So, make it blank. Inserting it to the nas after that, being on xraid a resync should be triggerred automatically and within a day or so you should be fine. Kind regards

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  • Retired_Member's avatar
    Retired_Member

    Hi GR8JAB , to be on the safe side I would remove all partitions from the disk before inserting it into the nas. So, make it blank. Inserting it to the nas after that, being on xraid a resync should be triggerred automatically and within a day or so you should be fine. Kind regards

    • GR8JAB's avatar
      GR8JAB
      Initiate

      Thanks for the response!  Today I found a USB-SATA adapter in a drawer at work, and downloaded Western Digital drive tools.  That should do the trick before inserting into the RN104.

      • StephenB's avatar
        StephenB
        Guru - Experienced User

        GR8JAB wrote:

        That should do the trick before inserting into the RN104.


        Yes it will.  You should probably run the non-destructive "long" test to make sure the drive is ok.

         

        Then zero the drive to remove the partitions.  There's an advanced test that does that.  The quick write test is enough to remove the partitions.  But if you have the time, I recommend running the full write-zeros test.  It can find issues that tthe non-destructive test misses (and vice versa).

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