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BigAl1's avatar
BigAl1
Aspirant
Apr 03, 2016
Solved

Time to replace my Duo V2, advice appreciated

My RND2120 v2 is no longer supported, and I have had it running 24/7 for about 5 years.   So it is time to replace it. I have also received a warning that one of my HD's is about to fail.   I use...
  • StephenB's avatar
    Apr 03, 2016

    BigAl1 wrote:

    i.e. I can only see drive 1.

    No, what you see is volume C.   You don't access the disk, you access the RAID volume.

     



     

    Netgear say to replace the drive with an identical drive, are they talking about the capacity, or the same make and model? Bearing in mind the drive is 5 years old, I doubt if I would find an identical replacement.

     

     


    The drives need to be the same size.  They don't need to be identical - one could be Western Digital and the other Seagate for instance.  You shouldn't be looking for an identical model - as you say its an outdated design.

     


    I think that I can, replace Drive 1 with a new drive of the same capacity (2TB). Drive 2 will then copy everything back to Drive 1. When this is completed, I was thinking about replacing Drive 2 with the second new drive.

     


    Basically yes.  You remove drive 1 with the system running, then hot-insert the first replacement.  The NAS will rebuild the RAID mirror, copying everything from drive 2 to drive 1.  After that completes, you can replace drive 2 and the NAS rebuilds again, copying everything from drive 2 to drive 1.

     

    It is recommended to make a backup before you do this.  Rebuilding the array does stress both drives, and if a drive fails during the process you will lose your data.

     


    BigAl1 wrote:

     

     

    So then I was thinking about replacing the ReadyNAS Duo with a ReadyNAS 200 with 4 Bays.

    So more questions.

     

    If Bay 1 is say Drive ‘F’, and Bay 2 is set to mirror Drive ‘F’, could I then set up Bay 3 as say Drive ‘G’ and set Bay 4 to mirror Drive ‘G’, assuming that I buy more HDD’s.

    Can I also have a 2TB in Bay 1 and 2 and say a 4TB in bays 3 and 4?


    If you use the default XRAID, then you wouldn't actually have a mirror like you have now.  If you had 4x2TB installed, you'd have a 6 TB volume, and still have protection from a single drive failure. You can have 2x2TB+2x4TB - that would give you an 8 TB volume.  The rule is to sum the drives and subtract the largest.

     

    The order you add the drives to the array matters.  Each drive you add has to be at least as large as the biggest one currently installed.

     

     

     

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