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D-Link DNS-323 Teardown
Teardown
Teardowns provide a look inside a device and should not be used as disassembly instructions.
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Teardown of the D-Link NAS DNS-323.
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Edit Step 1
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D-Link DNS-323 Teardown
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The DNS-323 is a powerful NAS with Gigabit Ethernet, print server and extension via software. It can have a FTP server, DHCP, and even Bittorrent!
This is my first disassembling, please be patient, correct my grammar mistakes if you find some.
This was pretty easy, nothing compared to iPods or Macs.

Edit Step 3 ¶
Now it's time to remove the Hard Disks.
BE CAREFUL, when handling these parts do not touch the circuits, do not shock, and to not make your dog play with them. I'm serious, this could lead into data loss.
At the back of the DNS pull out the two little levers to make the hard drives come out.
Gently take them and keep in a safe place until the whole unit is reassembled.
The drives are order-sensitive! Remember if they were right or left, otherwise you will be prompted a message when accessing the NAS.

Edit Step 8 ¶
Time to remove the iron part.
Pull out the fan wire. If you need you can use a flat screwdriver, paying attention not to break it.
It's time to detach the SATA adapters with the fan, so you can contemplate the main circuit.
Don't remove the battery, this could lead to time loss, some basic settings (not all because most of them are stored inside the HDs) and unwanted resets.

Edit Step 9 ¶
Now all about the chips
The first chip looks like a flash memory for the ROM, or the random memory for the OS, there are two of them; Labelled 921EA C HY5DU56 1622FTP-043 Made in Korea NWFM136SAG3
Marvell 88F8152-A2 "Feroceon(r)" Storage Networking SoC (System-on-Chip)
A 12 to 24 bit multiplexed D-type latch marked 94CJNQK ALVCH162260 , see more there -->
Eon SiliconSolution Inc EN29LV640B-90TIP 64Mbit Flash memory
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