EasyRAID Recovery



recovering easyraid

We recover data from EasyRAID drives with any hardware or software failure. If your RAID has failed, our engineers will repair and recover the RAID. Quickly and efficiently.

If one of the disks in your EasyRAID has failed or crashed, or the RAID has become corrupted due to a failed RAID rebuild, or a firmware update failed, please contact us to speak to one of our engineers. They will advise what you should do to prevent further data loss, and how to start the process of restoring your EasyRAID device.

If you deleted data by mistake, it is sometimes best to pull the power immediately from the RAID. Again, if you contact us, our engineers will explain the reasons, after discussing the nature of the problem and cause of the failure.

If you cannot access the EasyRAID, or it will not boot because of some other system error, please do not continue trying recovery yourself; you could easily cause further damage to the data. It may even completely destroy your data, with no chance of recovery.

Getting Your Data Back

recovering dlink data

In the first instance, contact us. We have lots of information from delivery and turnaround to what happens if you’re outside of the UK on our website along with a list of FAQs that will help put your mind at ease.

Our engineers are well-known throughout the industry for their RAID recovery abilities, and for their ability to recover data from systems that other providers have considered terminal. They retrieve data and restore servers that have failed for any of the following reasons:

Outside the UK?

International data recovery Services

Getting your failed storage medium to us from the USA, mainland Europe or Australia poses little more effort than shipping from within the UK? To find out more, please visit our page on international data recovery

RAID Recovery Leaders

Our engineers work with all operating systems and file systems. They recover Apple Mac data, Windows, Linux, UNIX, Solairs and Novell. They know and understand how file systems work, and recover files from NTFS and Apple HFS, to Linux Ext3, Ext4, XFS and ZFS. They recover from all RAID devices; from smaller arrays up to 16 drives, to enterprise systems consisting of hundreds of disks.

Recovering EasyRAID Data

  • M2X2S/B
    • 2.5″ drive support
    • RAID 0, RAID 1.
  • M2S200/B
    • Specifications as above
  • M2S300/B
    • M2S EasyRAID
    • 2 drives.
    • RAID 1
    • Automatic data regeneration
  • R5S-A1/B
    • RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 10, RAID 3, RAID 5, RAID 6, JBOD
    • Multiple RAID levels
    • Deleted file recovery
    • Online RAID level and stripe size migration
    • Recover RAID corruption
  • R5S-U4
    • RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 3, RAID 5, RAID 6, JBOD
  • Q12+
    • RAID 30, RAID 50 and others as with R5S
  • Q12P2
    • As above, with NRAID
    • Fibre Channel
  • Q12PS
    • SAS hard drives
  • Q12R
    • Online capacity expansion failed
    • Online array recovery
  • Q12S
  • Q16+
    • 16 hard drives
  • Q16P2
    • As Q16+ but RAID 60
  • Q16PS
  • Q16QA
    • Global hot spare
    • Dedicated hot spare
    • Multiple user data volumes
    • Multiple RAID volume groups
  • Q16R
  • Q16S
  • Q16QS
  • Q16JS
  • Q24R-F4R2
    • Built-in Array Recovery
    • Disk self-test
    • Instant eraser
  • Q24S
  • Q24P2
    • Online expansion failed
    • Failed disk group
    • Disk expansion
    • Regenerate data
    • Logical disks
    • Global spare
    • Local hotspare
  • S6A2
  • S8A2
  • S8A2-U4TT

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