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I was wondering roughly the power difference between hibernation and sleep mode? I know hibernation uses almost exactly the same amount of power as when the PC is off, but how about sleep mode?
Also, I don’t mind my PC going into hibernation. It’s just annoying having to wait a good ten minutes for it to load everything back into the RAM. So providing I were to leave it in sleep mode all the time, would it have a negative effect on my PCs health?
I currently have my PC running a good 10-15 hours straight per day. The rest of the time, it is sleeping/hibernating (hybrid sleep is set to 3 hours). What would your views be on this?
2Hibernation doesn't just use "almost exactly the same amount of power as when the PC is off" - it uses *exactly* the same amount of power as when the PC is off. During hibernation, the PC is entirely in an off state. You can pull the power cord, remove the battery, and even go so far as to completely disassemble and reassemble the computer while it's hibernated. So long as it's re-assembled exactly the same (and there can even be some exceptions to this) it should re-boot just as well as if you'd set it to hibernate and then woken it back up without doing anything else to it. – Iszi – 2014-11-04T19:49:54.680
Hibernation just writes the RAM to disk, then uses a special boot process to restore the working state to RAM from the HDD. – Iszi – 2014-11-04T19:50:22.930
You're right there. I shouldn't have made that mistake c; – Gaben Newil – 2014-11-04T19:52:44.680
Voted to close as "Opinion-Based"/"Not Constructive", as previous duplicates have been: What is the impact of leaving a laptop in “sleep” mode (while on battery power)? (closed), Should I set my laptop to sleep/standby or hibernate when the battery is nearly dead? (closed/deleted) (need high rep to see)
– Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007 – 2014-11-04T20:08:07.530