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Forum Discussion
bmcdonald666
May 31, 2019Aspirant
RND4000 v3 not powering on - what should I buy to replace it so my harddrive data can be recovered
My ReadyNAS RND4000v3 no longer powers up. I asssume my four 2Tb Hard Drives are still good and I want to recover the data on there. Is there another model (current) that will simply allow me to slo...
- Jun 17, 2019
bmcdonald666 wrote:
If I insert my 4 s 2TB Hard-drives in to it in the same order as my RND4000 will my data be accessible?
Yes, you can directly migrate the drives.
First install a spare disk into the replacement NAS. Any SATA drive <= 2 TB will work for this. After the factory install completes, update the firmware in the replacement to match your existing NAS. If you don't know the firmware you are running, then install the latest (4.1.16).
Then try booting the replacement with the disk installed in each bay - just to make sure that all the bays are functional.
After that, power down and migrate the drives. All the settings are preserved (the operating system and configuration files on the drives), and your data will be available (unless something was corrupted when your current NAS failed).
bmcdonald666
Jun 15, 2019Aspirant
Is the NAS Model RND4210 compatible? Can I put my hard drives in from my RND4000 which won't power up?
StephenB
Jun 15, 2019Guru - Experienced User
bmcdonald666 wrote:
Is the NAS Model RND4210 compatible?
Generally the NV+ models had part numbers that were formatted as RND4XY0. Y=1 meant that one drive was included. X=2 meant that drive was 2 TB in size. X=0, Y=0 meant the system was shipped diskless.
So an RND4210 is just a regular NV+ that shipped with a 2 TB Netgear-supplied disk.
However, there is another aspect to check out. Netgear replaced the NV+ with the NV+ v2 in 2011 - but they continued to use the same RND4000 part number (with a -200 at the end). So it is very easy to confuse the v2 (arm-based NAS) with the original v1 (sparc-based NAS). And they are not compatible - so you need to be careful to confirm that you are getting the sparc-based model.
The original v1
- says ReadyNAS NV+ (or ReadyNAS NV) on the front of the chassis
- has a silver and black chassis
- Usually has trays with circular buttons (but might have trays with a rectangular button)
- runs 4.1.x firmware
- may have labels on the back that include v2 or v3
The v2
- says ReadyNAS NV+ v2 on the front of the chassis
- has a black chassis
- has trays with rectangular buttons.
- runs 5.3.x firmware
bmcdonald666 wrote:
Can I put my hard drives in from my RND4000 which won't power up?
You can directly migrate your drives to any v1 NAS that has enough bays. So if the RND4210 is a v1, you can migrate to it.
You do want to make sure that the replacement NAS is running the same firmware as the old one. So do a factory install with a spare disk (not in the array), and either install matching firmware or the final 4.1.16 firmware. That disk will be formatted of course.
I also suggest testing that all 4 bays work. You can do this by powering down, moving the disk to bay 2 (or 3, 4), and then power up - since the system will boot from any bay.
Once you've matched the firmware, and have confirmed that the replacement NAS is functional, then power down, and migrate your disks - preserving the slot order.
- bmcdonald666Jun 17, 2019Aspirant
Hello
Ok so the RND4210 is the same model. If I insert my 4 s 2TB Hard-drives in to it in the same order as my RND4000 will my data be accessible? I am hoping it will just recognise everything as it was before my RND4000 decidied it no longer wants to power-up. I do not want to loose my data.
- StephenBJun 17, 2019Guru - Experienced User
bmcdonald666 wrote:
If I insert my 4 s 2TB Hard-drives in to it in the same order as my RND4000 will my data be accessible?
Yes, you can directly migrate the drives.
First install a spare disk into the replacement NAS. Any SATA drive <= 2 TB will work for this. After the factory install completes, update the firmware in the replacement to match your existing NAS. If you don't know the firmware you are running, then install the latest (4.1.16).
Then try booting the replacement with the disk installed in each bay - just to make sure that all the bays are functional.
After that, power down and migrate the drives. All the settings are preserved (the operating system and configuration files on the drives), and your data will be available (unless something was corrupted when your current NAS failed).
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