NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.
Forum Discussion
madigan91
Jun 12, 2019Aspirant
USB Recovery 4.2 Fails to start
Basically received the drive from my workplace due to it's age and was no longer suitable for use. Had it working without hitches and was functioning 100%. When I received it, it was on 4.2.9. I...
- Jun 14, 2019
I don't bloody believe it... I made a post last night (Australia) and it has been deleted. I didn't give up as I knew that it was still functioning and just been a basic pain in the backside.
For reference - the error that I was receiving when attempting to create a USB Recovery with 4.2 USB Recovery tool related to the side-by-side configuration. In event viewer it was referencing the lack of VC80 and referencing x86 which is standard speak for a 32-bit application. VC80 being installed via the 2005 x86 Visual C++ redistribution. I installed pretty much every single one that I could find on the windows site none of which worked. I came back to my computer tonight to find that it may have been awaiting a restart to complete the install and the USB recovery was then functional. I may be lucky as the only USB flash drive I have is a 32GB SanDisk Ultra 3.0, so definitely nothing overly old and it worked first go with the USB Boot, holding the backup button during power on with the recovery drive in the front USB slot.
There was no front panel indication that it was doing anything, however lack of front panel meant it was doing something as I didn't receive the standard booting...
All in all, the issues related back to a misshap in the upgrade process and new computers not being 100% supportable out of the box with very old software.
Thanks Stephen for all the advice as the links did assist me greatly, especially about re-re-rereading how the USB Recovery Software works.
StephenB
Jun 12, 2019Guru - Experienced User
madigan91 wrote:
I've also tried to putty into the serial, but can't seem to find the correct pinout on the nas end.. I have a USB to FTD1232 for arduino programming, so can easily identify RX, TX Ground and 5v (or should I use 3v3)
https://gist.github.com/davewongillies/6481138 has some info on using the serial port.
madigan91 wrote:
I'm at the stage of trying to perform a USB Recovery install - however running into more issues even getting the application to run. As these legacy devices were probably well past support when Win10 was even thought of it doesn't run. I've installed a 32-bit Win7 virtual machine to see if that will run and same error. Is anyone able to provide advise on how to run the application?
What errors are you getting? Are you using the instructions here: https://kb.netgear.com/30267/RAIDiator-4-2-USB-Recovery-Tool
madigan91 wrote:
I've taken the hard-drives and everything out but still no go.
Did you look at the status with RAIDar (with the drives removed)? https://kb.netgear.com/20684/ReadyNAS-Downloads
You should see "no disks" on the LCD display. RAIDar should "see" the NAS, and also report a no-disks status.
madigan91
Jun 14, 2019Aspirant
I don't bloody believe it... I made a post last night (Australia) and it has been deleted. I didn't give up as I knew that it was still functioning and just been a basic pain in the backside.
For reference - the error that I was receiving when attempting to create a USB Recovery with 4.2 USB Recovery tool related to the side-by-side configuration. In event viewer it was referencing the lack of VC80 and referencing x86 which is standard speak for a 32-bit application. VC80 being installed via the 2005 x86 Visual C++ redistribution. I installed pretty much every single one that I could find on the windows site none of which worked. I came back to my computer tonight to find that it may have been awaiting a restart to complete the install and the USB recovery was then functional. I may be lucky as the only USB flash drive I have is a 32GB SanDisk Ultra 3.0, so definitely nothing overly old and it worked first go with the USB Boot, holding the backup button during power on with the recovery drive in the front USB slot.
There was no front panel indication that it was doing anything, however lack of front panel meant it was doing something as I didn't receive the standard booting...
All in all, the issues related back to a misshap in the upgrade process and new computers not being 100% supportable out of the box with very old software.
Thanks Stephen for all the advice as the links did assist me greatly, especially about re-re-rereading how the USB Recovery Software works.
Related Content
NETGEAR Academy

Boost your skills with the Netgear Academy - Get trained, certified and stay ahead with the latest Netgear technology!
Join Us!