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RichNas2210's avatar
RichNas2210
Aspirant
Oct 13, 2022
Solved

RND2210 stays on

My Ready NAS Duo was not being recognized by my computer. I saw the blue power light was just flashing. I tried to turn it off by holding in the power button and it will not turn off. I tried unplugg...
  • StephenB's avatar
    StephenB
    Oct 21, 2022

    RichNas2210 wrote:

    I assume that either this drive is bad or formatted differently as you pointed out. 


    More likely the drive has failed.  Normally the system will attempt to boot from the disk in the lowest slot, and if that disk is bad the boot will fail.

     

    RichNas2210 wrote:

    could there be a problem with the housing and replacing everything being the best solution?


    You can check the housing by powering down the NAS, and moving the drive that works into the other slot.  If it boots normally, then it's not the housing.  (The SATA interface in the NAS can fail, but that is pretty rare, and given the age of the drives, the problem is more likely a failed drive).

     

    The NAS is old though, and no longer supported.  Several of the protocols it uses are out-of-date, and it hasn't gotten any security updates since 2017.

     

    So you could decide to replace everything - either with a new NAS model, or with a cloud service.  Apple, Google, and Microsoft all offer cloud storage, and their pricing is pretty reasonable for storage <= 2TB.  There are also other cloud options.  If you go with a new NAS, then you should look at other vendors (Synology being rather popular).  It's pretty clear that Netgear is quietly exiting the NAS business.

     


    RichNas2210 wrote:

    Either way both of the drives and the ReadyNas Duo housing are 11 years old. My question is should I just replace the drives or could there be a problem with the housing and replacing everything being the best solution?


    If the Duo still meets your needs, you can just replace the drives.  I'd go with WD20EFRX (not the WD20EFAX), or the 2 TB Seagate Ironwolf (ST2000VN004).  These are intended for NAS use.  Consumer drives are not good choices anymore, many use a technology called SMR which is not a good option for NAS.

     

    If you get two drives, you can insert one first (with the original disk), and wait for the resync to complete.  Then insert the second, and wait for it to resync.  If your current disks are smaller than 2 TB, then after the second resync completes the volume will expand to 2 TB.

     

    Note that if your NAS is the original Duo (saying "ReadyNAS Duo" on the front panel, and running 4.1.x firmware), then you can't use disks larger than 2 TB.  If your NAS says "ReadyNAS Duo v2" on the front panel, then it runs 5.3.x firmware, and can accept larger disks.  If you happen to be using disks > 2 TB already, then obviously either get the same size or larger.  Still, I suggest either WD Red Plus or Ironwolf for either model of Duo.  Avoid the current WD Red models (they are all SMR).

     


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