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mikibuza's avatar
mikibuza
Aspirant
May 26, 2021
Solved

RN314 with 4X10TB disks

Dear all.

I wanted to upgrade my Readynas RN 314 from m4X512GB, to 4x10 TB disks.

Is that possibble, can the NAS handle it?


  • mikibuza wrote:

    Yes i wanted to make a full backup on an external drive, and than power down, swap the disks, and boot up again.

    Just to be on the safe side, since i am spending 1700 euros on the drives, the model on the attached picture can handle 4X10 TB Seagate Ironwolf disks in a raid 5/6 configuration?

     


    The mods rejected your photo, probably because it included your NAS serial number.  But 10 TB Seagate Ironwolf drives are compatible with your NAS (and are on the hardware compatibility list).

     

    The default XRAID configuration will use RAID-5 with 4x10TB disks, and give you a 30 TB (~27.3 TiB) volume.

     

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  • StephenB's avatar
    StephenB
    Guru - Experienced User

    mikibuza wrote:

    I wanted to upgrade my Readynas RN 314 from 4X512GB, to 4x10 TB disks.

    Is that possible, can the NAS handle it?


    Yes.  I recommend using either NAS-purposed drives (WD Red Plus, Seagate Ironwolf) or Enterprise Class Drives.

     

    While you can upgrade by hot-swapping one disk at a time (waiting for the resync to complete before doing the next), it will be faster to copy off your data, and then do a fresh install on the 4x10 TB drives (putting them all into the NAS powered down, and then power up to do a factory install).  After the install, reconfigure the NAS and restore the data from the backup.

     

    FWIW, I always test my disks with vendor tools in a Windows PC before using them in the NAS. (WD Digital Dashboard for WD, Seatools for Seagate).  I first run the long non-destructive test, and if that passes I follow up with the full write zeros/erase test.  Though it takes quite a while, I'd prefer to know if there are out-of-the-box issues with the disks before I try and install them.

    • mikibuza's avatar
      mikibuza
      Aspirant

      StephenB wrote:

      mikibuza wrote:

      I wanted to upgrade my Readynas RN 314 from 4X512GB, to 4x10 TB disks.

      Is that possible, can the NAS handle it?


      Yes.  I recommend using either NAS-purposed drives (WD Red Plus, Seagate Ironwolf) or Enterprise Class Drives.

       

      While you can upgrade by hot-swapping one disk at a time (waiting for the resync to complete before doing the next), it will be faster to copy off your data, and then do a fresh install on the 4x10 TB drives (putting them all into the NAS powered down, and then power up to do a factory install).  After the install, reconfigure the NAS and restore the data from the backup.

       

      FWIW, I always test my disks with vendor tools in a Windows PC before using them in the NAS. (WD Digital Dashboard for WD, Seatools for Seagate).  I first run the long non-destructive test, and if that passes I follow up with the full write zeros/erase test.  Though it takes quite a while, I'd prefer to know if there are out-of-the-box issues with the disks before I try and install them.


      Thank you very much for your answer.

      Yes i wanted to maks a full backup on an external drive, and than power down, swap the disks, and boot up again.

      Just to be on the safe side, since i am spending 1700 euros on the drives, the modell on the attached picture can handle 4X10 TB Seagat Ironwolf disks in a raid 5/6 configuration?

      • StephenB's avatar
        StephenB
        Guru - Experienced User

        mikibuza wrote:

        Yes i wanted to make a full backup on an external drive, and than power down, swap the disks, and boot up again.

        Just to be on the safe side, since i am spending 1700 euros on the drives, the model on the attached picture can handle 4X10 TB Seagate Ironwolf disks in a raid 5/6 configuration?

         


        The mods rejected your photo, probably because it included your NAS serial number.  But 10 TB Seagate Ironwolf drives are compatible with your NAS (and are on the hardware compatibility list).

         

        The default XRAID configuration will use RAID-5 with 4x10TB disks, and give you a 30 TB (~27.3 TiB) volume.

         

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