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Fermion
Feb 03, 2025Tutor
ReadyNas Ultra 6 Stuck on Boot – NOT NAS Hardware – Other Drives From Second NAS Work Fine
Let me start by saying I do not know almost anything about the recovery procedures. I am fairly technical but am not familiar with how to recover a NAS. I have browsed this forum but I have advantage that others with similar problems did not have. I have 2 identical ReadyNas Ultra 6. One that still works and one that died. They do not have the same data and I do not have a backup (lesson learned).
I own Qty 2, ReadyNas Ultra 6 NAS:
NAS1: Has 6 Drives and is running OS 6.10.8 (ReadyNas Ultra 6)
NAS2: Has 6 Drives and is running OS 6.10.8 (ReadyNas Ultra 6)
After a power outage and UPS failure last night, NAS1 did not come back up and would just show the Netgear logo on the display and would not show up in RAIDar. NAS2 worked just fine and came back up perfectly.
Test 1 – I powered down NAS1 and NAS2. I carefully removed the drives from NAS1, being sure to keep the order they came out in. I then placed the drives from the working NAS2 in NAS1 in the correct order. Now NAS1 comes up with NAS2 drives showing NAS2 data and with NAS2 identification. That tell me that the problem is NOT the NAS hardware of NAS1.
Test 2 – I place the suspect drives from NAS1 in NAS2 maintaining the same order. Now NAS2 does NOT come up and hangs at the Netgear logo exactly the same as NAS1 would do when those same drives were in NAS1. That tells me that the problem follows the drives regardless of what NAS that they are in.
Test 3 – I put the drives back in their original corresponding NAS’s that they came from. NAS1 is back to not coming up, and NAS2 works as normal. We are back to where we started. This completely confirms that the problem follows the drives.
So, knowing it is NOT the NAS hardware. How can I possibly get NAS1 back up and running to recover the data (or as much of it as possible). What do I need to download and do? I saw something about some “USB Recovery Tool”. The NAS1 was running OS 6.10.8 when it died.
What should I try next to get it back?
I cannot express how grateful I would be for ANY help at all. I am happy to gift a token of my appreciation. It would mean a lot to me!
Jean-Marie Vaneskahian
jean@vaneskahian.com
12 Replies
- StephenBGuru - Experienced User
Fermion wrote:
I saw something about some “USB Recovery Tool”.
You won't need that, since you already now the problem is not the NAS.
Fermion wrote:
What should I try next to get it back?I suggest starting by connecting the NAS 1 disks (one at a time) to a Windows PC, and testing them with the vendor tools (dashboard for Western Digital, Seatools for Seagate). Windows won't recognize the file format, but the tools should still find the disks. You can connect them using a USB adapter/dock.
- FermionTutorThank you. I have exactly what you are describing. A drive adapter that powers the SATA drive and also converts the data to USB to connect to a PC.
I understand that windows will not be able to use the file system on the drive. These are WD RED drives. So I guess I need to download the “Dashboard” tool you mentioned.
My questions are the following:
1 - What do I do once I connect the drive? What is the goal? What am I looking for?
2 - Can I not just take one drive at a time out of NAS1 and then power it up and see if it comes up? If not put that drive back in and see if the next drive removed allows it to come up?
3 - For my own education, how can a drive failure or corruption take down the entire NAS? Isn’t that exactly what it’s designed to avoid happening? What causes a bad drive or bad drive data to lock up a NAS so nothing at all comes up? Not even the network interface?
Thanks for your patience and helping me understand.- StephenBGuru - Experienced User
Fermion wrote:
1 - What do I do once I connect the drive? What is the goal? What am I looking for?First, run the short test on each drive. If that passes, follow it up with the long test.
The goal is just to make sure all the drives are healthy.
Fermion wrote:
2 - Can I not just take one drive at a time out of NAS1 and then power it up and see if it comes up? If not put that drive back in and see if the next drive removed allows it to come up?That is an option if you power down the NAS when you remove/replace drives. If the NAS does come up,. then offload the data before you do anything else. Don't write anything to the NAS, and don't replace the missing disk.
Fermion wrote:
3 - For my own education, how can a drive failure or corruption take down the entire NAS?There are several scenarios. One is that you might have more than one failed (or failing) disk.
Failing disks can sometimes lock up the SATA bus. The drive might also be timing out on every read command, which would make the boot process glacially slow.
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