My laptop is extremely slow and HDD is always 100% engaged in Task Manager





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I have been searching for a solution for a while and read many discussions on the issue, including two threads on SuperUser:



Laptop's disk usage is always 100% and freezes after few seconds



Windows 8.1 Update 1 Disk Usage 100%



However, none is conclusive. My Task Manager always shows 100% for Disk. I have recently re-installed Windows 10 and have not installed so many applications yet. My HDD is half empty. The laptop is a HP Pavilion DV6 with 12 GB of RAM and 7-8 years old. I am not sure whether my HDD needs to be replaced. As I said, I have read many discussions and followed everything that had something to do with viruses, anti-viruses, hibernation, etc, and none worked for me. How can I decide whether the HDD is the reason?



My Task Manager










share|improve this question

























  • If you truly still have spinning rust, you should seriously consider upgrading to a SSD. It will give you a tremendous speed boost for a very reasonable amount of money.

    – Daniel B
    Jan 28 at 10:10






  • 1





    @DanielB Thanks for the response. Would you consider that change? I mean, is there any way/test to make sure that is the reason? BTW, I compared it with my other laptop which stands at 6-7% hdd usage with much more software installed.

    – Ben
    Jan 28 at 10:18











  • It’s just general advice, only loosely related to your question. I’m not saying that’s the reason, although it definitely is a factor. It’s not related to the amount of software installed but the amount of software running.

    – Daniel B
    Jan 28 at 10:24


















0















I have been searching for a solution for a while and read many discussions on the issue, including two threads on SuperUser:



Laptop's disk usage is always 100% and freezes after few seconds



Windows 8.1 Update 1 Disk Usage 100%



However, none is conclusive. My Task Manager always shows 100% for Disk. I have recently re-installed Windows 10 and have not installed so many applications yet. My HDD is half empty. The laptop is a HP Pavilion DV6 with 12 GB of RAM and 7-8 years old. I am not sure whether my HDD needs to be replaced. As I said, I have read many discussions and followed everything that had something to do with viruses, anti-viruses, hibernation, etc, and none worked for me. How can I decide whether the HDD is the reason?



My Task Manager










share|improve this question

























  • If you truly still have spinning rust, you should seriously consider upgrading to a SSD. It will give you a tremendous speed boost for a very reasonable amount of money.

    – Daniel B
    Jan 28 at 10:10






  • 1





    @DanielB Thanks for the response. Would you consider that change? I mean, is there any way/test to make sure that is the reason? BTW, I compared it with my other laptop which stands at 6-7% hdd usage with much more software installed.

    – Ben
    Jan 28 at 10:18











  • It’s just general advice, only loosely related to your question. I’m not saying that’s the reason, although it definitely is a factor. It’s not related to the amount of software installed but the amount of software running.

    – Daniel B
    Jan 28 at 10:24














0












0








0








I have been searching for a solution for a while and read many discussions on the issue, including two threads on SuperUser:



Laptop's disk usage is always 100% and freezes after few seconds



Windows 8.1 Update 1 Disk Usage 100%



However, none is conclusive. My Task Manager always shows 100% for Disk. I have recently re-installed Windows 10 and have not installed so many applications yet. My HDD is half empty. The laptop is a HP Pavilion DV6 with 12 GB of RAM and 7-8 years old. I am not sure whether my HDD needs to be replaced. As I said, I have read many discussions and followed everything that had something to do with viruses, anti-viruses, hibernation, etc, and none worked for me. How can I decide whether the HDD is the reason?



My Task Manager










share|improve this question
















I have been searching for a solution for a while and read many discussions on the issue, including two threads on SuperUser:



Laptop's disk usage is always 100% and freezes after few seconds



Windows 8.1 Update 1 Disk Usage 100%



However, none is conclusive. My Task Manager always shows 100% for Disk. I have recently re-installed Windows 10 and have not installed so many applications yet. My HDD is half empty. The laptop is a HP Pavilion DV6 with 12 GB of RAM and 7-8 years old. I am not sure whether my HDD needs to be replaced. As I said, I have read many discussions and followed everything that had something to do with viruses, anti-viruses, hibernation, etc, and none worked for me. How can I decide whether the HDD is the reason?



My Task Manager







hard-drive task-manager






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 28 at 11:52









Ahmed Ashour

1,3872716




1,3872716










asked Jan 28 at 9:58









BenBen

1




1













  • If you truly still have spinning rust, you should seriously consider upgrading to a SSD. It will give you a tremendous speed boost for a very reasonable amount of money.

    – Daniel B
    Jan 28 at 10:10






  • 1





    @DanielB Thanks for the response. Would you consider that change? I mean, is there any way/test to make sure that is the reason? BTW, I compared it with my other laptop which stands at 6-7% hdd usage with much more software installed.

    – Ben
    Jan 28 at 10:18











  • It’s just general advice, only loosely related to your question. I’m not saying that’s the reason, although it definitely is a factor. It’s not related to the amount of software installed but the amount of software running.

    – Daniel B
    Jan 28 at 10:24



















  • If you truly still have spinning rust, you should seriously consider upgrading to a SSD. It will give you a tremendous speed boost for a very reasonable amount of money.

    – Daniel B
    Jan 28 at 10:10






  • 1





    @DanielB Thanks for the response. Would you consider that change? I mean, is there any way/test to make sure that is the reason? BTW, I compared it with my other laptop which stands at 6-7% hdd usage with much more software installed.

    – Ben
    Jan 28 at 10:18











  • It’s just general advice, only loosely related to your question. I’m not saying that’s the reason, although it definitely is a factor. It’s not related to the amount of software installed but the amount of software running.

    – Daniel B
    Jan 28 at 10:24

















If you truly still have spinning rust, you should seriously consider upgrading to a SSD. It will give you a tremendous speed boost for a very reasonable amount of money.

– Daniel B
Jan 28 at 10:10





If you truly still have spinning rust, you should seriously consider upgrading to a SSD. It will give you a tremendous speed boost for a very reasonable amount of money.

– Daniel B
Jan 28 at 10:10




1




1





@DanielB Thanks for the response. Would you consider that change? I mean, is there any way/test to make sure that is the reason? BTW, I compared it with my other laptop which stands at 6-7% hdd usage with much more software installed.

– Ben
Jan 28 at 10:18





@DanielB Thanks for the response. Would you consider that change? I mean, is there any way/test to make sure that is the reason? BTW, I compared it with my other laptop which stands at 6-7% hdd usage with much more software installed.

– Ben
Jan 28 at 10:18













It’s just general advice, only loosely related to your question. I’m not saying that’s the reason, although it definitely is a factor. It’s not related to the amount of software installed but the amount of software running.

– Daniel B
Jan 28 at 10:24





It’s just general advice, only loosely related to your question. I’m not saying that’s the reason, although it definitely is a factor. It’s not related to the amount of software installed but the amount of software running.

– Daniel B
Jan 28 at 10:24










1 Answer
1






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oldest

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It doesn't look like anything is wrong from the face of it. After reinstall, your laptop is now downloading all the updates that weren't included in the installer (MpSigStub).



Additionally, a lot of disk activity is attributed to googledrivesync. Did you already install Google Drive and sign in to it? If so, it is now probably trying to sync your cloud contents.to your harddrive, which in turn will cause a lot of disk activity.



Both processes should go down over time, how much time is not something that can be told up front.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thanks for the response. I installed Windows a while ago. I have had this speed problem before and after reinstalling Windows.

    – Ben
    Jan 28 at 10:16












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1 Answer
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active

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

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active

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0














It doesn't look like anything is wrong from the face of it. After reinstall, your laptop is now downloading all the updates that weren't included in the installer (MpSigStub).



Additionally, a lot of disk activity is attributed to googledrivesync. Did you already install Google Drive and sign in to it? If so, it is now probably trying to sync your cloud contents.to your harddrive, which in turn will cause a lot of disk activity.



Both processes should go down over time, how much time is not something that can be told up front.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thanks for the response. I installed Windows a while ago. I have had this speed problem before and after reinstalling Windows.

    – Ben
    Jan 28 at 10:16
















0














It doesn't look like anything is wrong from the face of it. After reinstall, your laptop is now downloading all the updates that weren't included in the installer (MpSigStub).



Additionally, a lot of disk activity is attributed to googledrivesync. Did you already install Google Drive and sign in to it? If so, it is now probably trying to sync your cloud contents.to your harddrive, which in turn will cause a lot of disk activity.



Both processes should go down over time, how much time is not something that can be told up front.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thanks for the response. I installed Windows a while ago. I have had this speed problem before and after reinstalling Windows.

    – Ben
    Jan 28 at 10:16














0












0








0







It doesn't look like anything is wrong from the face of it. After reinstall, your laptop is now downloading all the updates that weren't included in the installer (MpSigStub).



Additionally, a lot of disk activity is attributed to googledrivesync. Did you already install Google Drive and sign in to it? If so, it is now probably trying to sync your cloud contents.to your harddrive, which in turn will cause a lot of disk activity.



Both processes should go down over time, how much time is not something that can be told up front.






share|improve this answer













It doesn't look like anything is wrong from the face of it. After reinstall, your laptop is now downloading all the updates that weren't included in the installer (MpSigStub).



Additionally, a lot of disk activity is attributed to googledrivesync. Did you already install Google Drive and sign in to it? If so, it is now probably trying to sync your cloud contents.to your harddrive, which in turn will cause a lot of disk activity.



Both processes should go down over time, how much time is not something that can be told up front.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 28 at 10:04









R-DR-D

2,52211622




2,52211622













  • Thanks for the response. I installed Windows a while ago. I have had this speed problem before and after reinstalling Windows.

    – Ben
    Jan 28 at 10:16



















  • Thanks for the response. I installed Windows a while ago. I have had this speed problem before and after reinstalling Windows.

    – Ben
    Jan 28 at 10:16

















Thanks for the response. I installed Windows a while ago. I have had this speed problem before and after reinstalling Windows.

– Ben
Jan 28 at 10:16





Thanks for the response. I installed Windows a while ago. I have had this speed problem before and after reinstalling Windows.

– Ben
Jan 28 at 10:16


















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