Ways to Solve Hard Disk LED (Activity) Non Stop Blinking Issues
After installing and running Windows Vista, a lot of users probably notice that the hard disk activity by Vista operating system is enormous, and probably unbelievable to say the least. The hard disk activity, which normally can be monitored via hard disk LED on computer’s casing, will show almost non-stop continuing operating, with LED blinks non-stop. Frequent hard disk I/O read/write activity by Vista will undoubtedly reduce system performance.
Why is Vista always accessing and writing or reading from HDD drive? The heavy usage of hard disk by Vista is probably due to some running background processes that poorly implemented or not optimized. There is a few tips and tricks to tweak Vista so that the operating can work ’silently’, or at least does not run such a high activity level on hard disks. Note that by applying the tricks, you may disable one or more
- Install Windows Vista Service Pack 1 (SP1) - Windows Vista SP1 improves on performance of various services and processes, which hopefully will reduce the need to access hard disks. Even though a lot of users notice slower PC and sluggishness right after installing SP1, however the slowdown is anticipated and expected to go away after a while, as explained by Microsoft in “notable changes for SP1” - the Windows Vista SP1 install process clears the user-specific data that is used by Windows to optimize performance, which may make the system feel less responsive immediately after install. As the customer uses their SP1 PC, the system will be retrained over the course of a few hours or days and will return to the previous level of responsiveness.
- If SP1 does not help, try to disable Windows SuperFetch, a service that preloads or prefetches frequently used programs to files to memory. Alternatively, users can use the following command in command prompt with administrative privileges:
net stop sysmain
- Disable Volume Shadow Copy (Volume Snapshot Service or VSS) and Microsoft Software Shadow Copy Provider service, which is the service creating snapshot backup copy of files for System Restore and Previous Versions. Note that disable Volume Shadow Copy service will disable your ability to restore system and user files when needed in time of accident or corruption.
- Disable System Restore for all hard disks. Note that once disabled, all restore points will be deleted, and users no longer able to restore system to previous state.
- Disable scheduled disk defragmentation for all drives. To disable automatic scheduled defragmentation, run Disk Defragmenter and uncheck the check box for “Run on a schedule (recommended)”.
- Disable disk indexing and files compression for all disk drives. To disable search indexing and files compression, right click on each drive, then uncheck the check boxes for “Compress this drive to save disk space” and “Index this drive for faster searching” options.
- Search indexing is powered by Windows Search service, which can also be turned off if not in used. See the guide to completely disable search indexing service.
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April 8th, 2008 09:59
Note — the light continues to blink when the drive is in spin down standby mode. No R/W going on. None of your responses will work.
Other web gurus also fail to note that point. BTW, no blink when W98 startup disk boots the machine. So what gives with XP and Vista?
No cigar today
Freddie Mack
Lanham Md
September 26th, 2008 11:13
Thanks for the tips but it’s a shame such a modern and advance OS is so convoluted. Why does it have to reboot after every update? Why does it reboot without permission? It did that the other day on me while burning a DVD. Apple fanboys piss me off and iTunes is a POS but I have to admit OSX is a better OS.