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Forum Discussion
dscycler108
Jun 23, 2020Aspirant
List of Legacy Readynas devices
I am trying to locate a list of old ReadyNas models. Years ago I had a 5-bay unit that has long been discarded. But I still have the 5 2-TB drives that were in the unit. Does anyone have any idea...
- Jun 23, 2020
I am not aware of the existance of a 5-bay model. The original pre-Netgear NAS were the 4-bay desktop 600, X6, and NV and the rack-mount 1000s. Then came Netgear with the 4-bay NV+, NVX, and 1100, 2-bay Duo, and 6-bay Pro (Business Edition and Pioneer versions) -- though I think those were in development by Infrant before the Netgear acquisition. From there, everything is all 2, 4, 6 or 8 bays for desktops and 4, 12, or 60 for rack mount. The EDA500 expansion chassis was 5-bay, but it had to be attached to a base NAS and that was <8 years ago that it was introduced.
Netgear did have a NAS before they acquired Infrant, which was not a ReadyNAS, but I don't think that was 5-bay, either. I think it was just 2-bay. And that would have been >10 years ago. They also had the 2-bay Stora, which was a complete disaster and abandoned leaving the owners no way to use their device because it had to have a link with the Netgear server that was taken down.
Maybe you had a 6-bay NAS and only had 5 drives installed?
Sandshark
Jun 23, 2020Sensei - Experienced User
I am not aware of the existance of a 5-bay model. The original pre-Netgear NAS were the 4-bay desktop 600, X6, and NV and the rack-mount 1000s. Then came Netgear with the 4-bay NV+, NVX, and 1100, 2-bay Duo, and 6-bay Pro (Business Edition and Pioneer versions) -- though I think those were in development by Infrant before the Netgear acquisition. From there, everything is all 2, 4, 6 or 8 bays for desktops and 4, 12, or 60 for rack mount. The EDA500 expansion chassis was 5-bay, but it had to be attached to a base NAS and that was <8 years ago that it was introduced.
Netgear did have a NAS before they acquired Infrant, which was not a ReadyNAS, but I don't think that was 5-bay, either. I think it was just 2-bay. And that would have been >10 years ago. They also had the 2-bay Stora, which was a complete disaster and abandoned leaving the owners no way to use their device because it had to have a link with the Netgear server that was taken down.
Maybe you had a 6-bay NAS and only had 5 drives installed?
dscycler108
Jun 23, 2020Aspirant
Thank you both for replying timely. The unit I had was a ReadyNas Pro Business.
- StephenBJun 24, 2020Guru - Experienced User
dscycler108 wrote:
Thank you both for replying timely. The unit I had was a ReadyNas Pro Business.
The Pro had two sizes - a four bay model and a six bay model. So you must have had 5 disks installed in a 6-bay unit (or perhaps aren't remembering the number of disks correctly).
There were also versions of each - the original Pro products (Pro Pioneer and Pro Business Edition) and the later Pro / Pro 6. The later versions had a faster CPU.
We might be able to provide more help if we knew more about what you are trying to accomplish.
- dscycler108Jun 24, 2020Aspirant
Thanks for the reply.
Is there a Model Number for the 6 bay ReadyNas Pro Business?
Thanks...
- StephenBJun 25, 2020Guru - Experienced User
dscycler108 wrote:
Is there a Model Number for the 6 bay ReadyNas Pro Business?
There were many models, depending on the number and size of any disks Netgear supplied. The general form was RNDP6xxx-100yyy. xxx had the number and size of the disks encoded into it. yyy was the geography. The -100 distinguished the Pro Business from the newer Pro 6 (which used -200).
The diskless model for North America was RNDP6000-100NAS.
If your goal is to extract data that might be on the disks, you don't need to track down the precise model to do that. Any 6-8 bay ReadyNAS can mount the array. They can be directly migrated to a Pro 6, Ultra 6, or Ultra 6 Plus. Newer OS 6 models (RN316, RN426, RN428, RN526, RN528, RN626, RN628, RN716) can also mount the disks as read-only (temporarily). Of course this assumes that the array is intact and the disks are still functioning.
Data can also be extracted by various data recovery services.
It is also possible to purchase a 5-disk USB enclosure along with RAID recovery software like R-Studio (www.r-studio.com). This would be done on an ordinary PC.
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