NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.
Forum Discussion
smithy50
Jul 22, 2015Tutor
ReadyNAS NV+ V2 & Seagate 4TB ST4000VN000 HDDs
Hi, I have a ReadyNAS NV+ V2 installed with 2 x 2TB and 2 x 3TB HDDs from the Netgear HCL. I want to increase the capacity by replacing the 2x 2TB HDDs with 2 x 4TB HDDs. Does anyone know if ...
smithy50
Jul 23, 2015Tutor
StephenB
Thanks StephenB for the quick response. I could not find any post that combined the ST4000VN000 and the NV+ V2 either.
It would be good if someone, who has tried the combination, could add to the thread.
Thanks Again
vandermerwe
Jul 23, 2015Master
Is your NAS still under warranty? If it is not then there is less concern about sticking to the HCL, it is dated as you can see. WD Red drives and the Seagate NAS drives are widely used on many Readynas models and it is exceedingly unlikely that you will have a problem. Of course no disks are perfect and you should always maintain backups.
- smithy50Jul 28, 2015Tutor
Hi Vandermerwe,
Good point. I have two ReadyNAS NV+ V2 devices: one bought in July 2012 and the other in October 2012. Assuming they had a one year warranty, they are both out of warranty.
I use one as my main data respository, which is backed up to the second. I would be reluctant to install the Seagate NAS drives into my main NAS, without confidence that they are compatible.
I may consider using external USB HDDs as a temporary back up to the main NAS and do a rebuild of the second NAS with the Seagate NAS drives.
My reluctance to use the WD40EFRX drives is because of their reported Load Cycle Count issue. It's not clear to me if this is still an issue on new WD40EFRX drives.
Thanks
- vandermerweJul 28, 2015Master
The warranty is 3 years so one is just still under warranty.
I gather the LCC issue has been rectified, and there is a WD tool to adjust the relevant parameter if necessary.
These drives are currently the best choices for readynas units. They are reliable and cost effective. Obviously if you have a lot of money you can get enterprise disks but they are much more expensive.
- StephenBJul 28, 2015Guru - Experienced User
smithy50 wrote:
My reluctance to use the WD40EFRX drives is because of their reported Load Cycle Count issue. It's not clear to me if this is still an issue on new WD40EFRX drives.
It's not, and if you end up with one of the few units where it was a problem you can fix it (as noted above).
- smithy50Jul 28, 2015Tutor
StephenB & Vandermerwe,
Thank you both for your positive responses. My only reluctance to using the WD40EFRX drives was the LCC issue, so if that's resolved on the current new drives then these would be my preferred upgrade route.
I've read somewhere that any volume capacity increase is limited to a percentage of the current volume capacity. My main ReadyNAS NV+ V2 (running 5.3.11) has 2 x 2TB WD20EARX drives and 2 x 3TB ST3000DM001 drives installed and configured as X-RAID2. My intention was to upgrade the two existing 2TB WD20EARX drives with two new 4TB drives (most probably now WD40EFRX drives). Does that scenario fall within any volume capacity increase limit?
Your help is much appreciated.
Thanks
Related Content
NETGEAR Academy
Boost your skills with the Netgear Academy - Get trained, certified and stay ahead with the latest Netgear technology!
Join Us!