Delete a disk set using Disk Utility on Mac
When you no longer need a disk set or want to remove individual disk members permanently from the set, you can delete the set.
Important: You can remove disks from a mirrored RAID set or concatenated disk set without deleting the set. To remove a disk from a striped RAID set, you must first delete the set—which deletes all your data. Always back up before you delete the set.
Delete a disk set
When you delete a set, the data recorded on the disks is not deleted. For example, deleting a mirrored RAID set leaves each disk in the set with a copy of all the RAID data. When you delete a concatenated set, all the data is copied to the first disk of the set (as long as the first disk has enough disk space to store the data), resulting in a single volume with all the data.
Important: Be sure to back up any important files before deleting a set.
Go to the Disk Utility app on your Mac.
If Disk Utility isn’t open, click in the Dock, type Disk Utility in the Search field, then click .
Select the disk set you want to delete in the sidebar.
Click the Delete RAID button.
Click Delete.
Erase all the disks in a disk set
Important: Be sure to back up any important files before erasing all the disks in a disk set.
Go to the Disk Utility app on your Mac.
If Disk Utility isn’t open, click in the Dock, type Disk Utility in the Search field, then click .
Select the disk set you want to erase in the sidebar.
Click .
Remove a disk from a disk set permanently
You can remove individual members of a mirrored RAID set or the last member of a concatenated disk set. You can’t remove individual members of a striped disk set without first erasing the entire set.
Important: Back up any important files before removing individual members of a disk set.
Go to the Disk Utility app on your Mac.
If Disk Utility isn’t open, click in the Dock, type Disk Utility in the Search field, then click .
Select a disk set in the sidebar.
Select the disk member that you want to delete from the set.
Click .
Click Remove.