NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.
Forum Discussion
sabbybali
Oct 04, 2017Aspirant
ReadyNAS NV V2 wont power on (ReadyNASRND4000v2)
Hi All, I have a ReadyNAS RND4000v2 and I think it got fried due to power outage we suffered in street. Out of warranty for sure as it was purchased back in 2012, no support either. Symptom ...
- Oct 04, 2017
sabbybali wrote:
I was running RAID-1 with two disks, but having 4 disks in NAS. So I get total of 6 GB mirrored storage.
Ok. If you have two RAID-1 volumes, then try R-linux for Windows (free utility). http://www.r-tt.com/free_linux_recovery/
Sandshark
Oct 04, 2017Sensei
If you are lucky, it could just be the power brick. On systems with such bricks, power surge damage is often limited to only that. If you are electronically inclined, you can measure the incoming 12V under load and see what is there. Suitable replacements are available.
There is no way to boot it via external media. If you have a computer with enough SATA ports, there are ways to boot that using a Windows Live CD and recover the data. But I'm not the expert there. I've only ever lost ReadyNAS's due to power supply failures and always have backups, so I have never needed to do that.
- StephenBOct 04, 2017Guru - Experienced User
I am wondering about the disks, because 320GB is a small size. If they are SSDs, there might be a compatibility issue - there are no SSDs on the NV+ hardware compatibility list. If they are mechanical disks, they might just be old/defective.
As far as troubleshooting the chassis, It's cheapest to try replacing the power brick first.
If the chassis has failed (with intact disks) there are a couple of options. Support can assist if you purchase a new ReadyNAS (though there might be an extra charge). Or connect the disks to a PC and boot that PC up under linux.
If you can find an inexpensive (but working) used NV+ v2, you can simply migrate the disks to it. You do need to be careful on the last option (for one thing, make sure you know exactly what model you are getting).
If the disks aren't completely intact, then you are looking at data recovery. Some users have reported good success with ReclaiMe. Netgear also offers a data recovery service ( https://kb.netgear.com/69/ReadyNAS-Data-Recovery-Diagnostics-Scope-of-Service ). Recovery is of course expensive, with no results guaranteed.
- SandsharkOct 04, 2017Sensei
OK, I was thinking he just grabbed any old drive to see if the NAS worked. I, myself, have several old 320GB drives I have used for just that -- they are tanks. But, tank or not, "any old drive" might have issues.
- sabbybaliOct 04, 2017Aspirant
Hi All,
Thanks for the help, I have multimeter and can confirm that power cable is showing ~12v on it, doesn't look like brick power. I have external sata docking; drives spin, and I can go to root partition but cannot access data partition ( due to raid), both the disks are hence good.
Both pair of my disks are 3TB, which is supported by NAS ( was sold by marketing it as 12TB NAS). Got my important docucments on it, and need these by end of month to avoid penalities. I had these documents completed last month, and forgot to back up on secondary drive.
The question is if anything can be done to hardware, which I guess, cannot be further investigated by booting from external device; as per your adivce, is there any restore mechnism I can try, such as press any button for 5-10 seconds to get to some secret menu? Tried reset; nothing happens, power button doesn't lit at all second time.
If I have to go for a new NAS hardware, any idea, which new NAS model will help me getting up and running without getting into data recovery and back up etc ? I do not wish to go out of pocket buying additional disks etc. I think if I buy similar hardware from eBay, Netgear will not support it ever.
Netgear products are very reliable, got few 24 port gigabit switch, even the ACXXX router, and many othe network devices, etc, never had any trouble or was too easy to fix. However this NAS hardware is the only one, which let me down; when I was relying on it most.
Thanks
Sabby
Related Content
NETGEAR Academy
Boost your skills with the Netgear Academy - Get trained, certified and stay ahead with the latest Netgear technology!
Join Us!