Airprox,
When I received my first DNS-320, I removed the clear plastic and obviously saw the power switch on the front. It setup flawlessly and worked for two months. All of my computers were configured to mount it at boot so it was just sort of “out-of-sight, out-of-mind” down in my home office. When it failed I called D-Link Tech Support and they walked me through trouble shooting it. (They have since verified that it had in-fact failed). When the replacement arrived and I couldn’t see any other switch, I “just knew” the USB copy button was it. I’ve mentored a lot of young engineers, so I know from experience; once you get an erroneous idea like that engrained it is almost impossible to get back on track without help. You provided exactly the help I needed, so again, thank you.
JavaLawyer,
Yes, as I said in an earlier post, I labeled each drive so it could be installed back into its original slot. They were installed correctly when I got the message in my last post.
The good news is that the RAID rebuild completed over night and all my data looks to be intact and accessible.
Obviously, since it is a new unit set to factory defaults, I had to reallocate the UPnP AV Server shares, and reconfigure the other settings I changed. As before, it streams video to my Samsung TV correctly, but won’t handle music or photos. I have an Asus RT-N16 router running Tomato USB that does the music & pictures correctly (as well as video) so I can use it until (and if) D-Link fixes their server. I also mentioned in an earlier post that TWONKY media server running on the DNS-320 and minidlna both were capable of streaming all three types of files stored on the DNS-320 to the TV so I think the problem is with the D-Link UPnP AV Server implementation.
Again, thanks to everyone who tried to help, especially t121anf for making us aware of a data recovery program that works with the DNS-320 RAID drives and Airprox for “stating the obvious”.