miku 0 Posted January 30, 2005 hi guys, i am having very strange problem. the hard drive noise is always there on the computer. the activity LED is NOT lit though but the noise is there even though i am not doing anything on the computer. It was ok when I installed windows and everything but now it isn't like that. Any suggestions. By the way, I have been copying a lot of data into and out of the HD. The Harddrive is 160GB WesterDigital 7200RPM drive. Thanks. AC Share this post Link to post
galink 0 Posted January 30, 2005 Just a guess but it sounds like the hard drive buffering. Maybe you need to adjust the settings for the synching of the data transfer or for the buffering or read/write buffering. Share this post Link to post
Jerry Atrik 0 Posted January 31, 2005 yea sounds like pagefile cacheing if theres enough system memory u can just turn it off. now days most systems have so much memory they dont really need a pagefile, nor do they need the pagefile to be cached. Share this post Link to post
Sampson 0 Posted January 31, 2005 As Alec stated there is a lot of housekeeping going on in the background. This used to be a notorious shortcoming of Win98 especially as screensavers tended to fill Ram and the hard disk churned like a washing machine in response. If you are concerned (though WesternDigitals are considered to be very stable) you could run chkdsk and then defragment the hard drive to make your disk is more "breatheable", in other words, more contiguous. This should re-index the drive and provide more contiguous space for data. I would suggest that you might want to invest in a good defragment program. The names of two I am familiar with and use are PerfectDisk and O&O. Share this post Link to post
Jerry Atrik 0 Posted January 31, 2005 i agree alex.. never turn the pagefile off but u can turn off the "pagefile executive" which turns off the caching. HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager\Memory Management change DisablePagingExecutive from 0 to 1 and your had drive will stop precaching... it's very very helpful for new drives that have a huge internal buffer Share this post Link to post