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My desktop takes ~3 minutes to fully wake up from sleep modeHibernate. I hear my hard drive clicking for ~3 minutes after wake. Restarts are also painfully slow. I look at CPU usage and its quite low...2-3% per core. The Desktop comes up quickly. But, accessing a program (IE) or OS operation (start menu) takes quite a bit longer.
I uninstalled some random programs I don't use and it seems to have helped a little. Right now memory usage is 1.63GB. Are there any decent tools to help me figure out why my PC is running sub-par? What else can I check?
Specs: windows 7, 6GB ram, i7 930 2.8GHz CPU, gaming video card.
Drive: wdc wd1002faex-00y9a0. OS installed on 8/31/2010. No I don't defrag. It is my understanding that windows does not by itself now. Hard drive passed a diagnostic and SMART (What specifically this test runs I do not know...but you can click the link).
As a point of reference, my Vista laptop with older, lesser hardware (Mac hardware, Bootcamp) is up and ready in ~1 minute tops. The hard drive remains silent during the process.
2what about the specifics of your hard drive? Make, model, RPM, Age, etc? Almost sounds like the hard drive might be failing... waking from sleep is supposed to the quickest. – Bon Gart – 2012-04-28T16:30:40.160
This is very likely your AV software being obnoxious. But Windoze is prone to this problem in general, as the I/O queues get badly backed up at times. – Daniel R Hicks – 2012-04-28T19:14:47.710
Have you defragmented your disk lately? Run the analyze option in defrag and see whether pagefile.sys is highly fragmented. – Ben Voigt – 2012-04-28T19:15:24.647
(And turning off indexing may help a little.) – Daniel R Hicks – 2012-04-28T19:15:40.923
Hybrid sleep could also be causing this. – nc4pk – 2012-04-28T19:45:32.303
@DanH "But Windoze is prone to this problem in general", what, none of my hundreds of Windows PCs have experienced this due to windows itself, give us a break. – Moab – 2012-04-28T20:10:56.200
I seriously doubt that you know what problems are experienced (and simply tolerated) on many of those computers. – Daniel R Hicks – 2012-04-28T20:21:22.650
1Are you using Hibernate or Sleep? There is a big difference here as with hibernate, Windows caches the memory into a file on your hard drive called Hiberfil.sys, which would explain the excessive HDD usage. The size of the file is the same as your RAM (so in your case 6gb). – Oliver G – 2012-04-30T15:04:46.270
@OliverG - Hibernate. I used the wrong term. – P.Brian.Mackey – 2012-04-30T15:08:22.593
Has this ALWAYS happened or started recently? With Hibernate the more you have open the longer it takes to load back into RAM Disk use is expected to be heavy. – Jeff F. – 2012-04-30T15:11:13.563
In that case that is the explanation. It doesn't store the information in your RAM, it is writing it to a file on your HD (a large one at that).
That said, if it's taking that long, it's probably an indication your hard drive is suffering a bit. Have you tried running a hard drive health program like GRC Spinrite? – Oliver G – 2012-04-30T15:11:23.647
You mention it passes diagnostic... Can you elaborate further on the nature of these diagnostics? What sustained reads and Writes are you seeing? How low are your IOPs? Did you run a Chckdsk /r /f? This will also check for filesystem errors. – Supercereal – 2012-04-30T17:46:01.310
@jefff - this started recently – P.Brian.Mackey – 2012-05-01T01:31:39.593