Should I Shut Down My PC At Night?

Wed Jan 31, 2007 4:18PM EST

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Reader Jason writes: Is it better to leave a computer on all the time or shut it off when you done? If I leave it on, what settings (like hibernate) should I use?

Years ago the conventional wisdom was that leaving your computer on all the time would allow it to last longer before a crash. The culprit: Your hard drive. Frequent starts and stops would cause your hard drive mechanism to wear out much faster than if the drive never spun down. An old saying (possibly apocryphal) was that stopping and restarting a hard drive was the same as eight hours of regular running time.

I talked to the good folks at Seagate to find out if things had changed. According to the company, starting and stopping is not a huge problem with drives any more, and they can be safely shut off and on in order to save power. According to Seagate, you can expect a drive to last for three to five years of running time before dying, though obviously many drives last longer.

What's the big factor that causes drives to die early? Heat, says Seagate. Ensuring your computer stays cool through the proper use of fans is far and away the best thing you can do to keep your drive healthy. I'd imagine that shutting it down when not in use will only help. Naturally, shutting down your computer will also conserve electricity, so unless there's a compelling reason to leave it on (as with a server), you should probably shut down at night.

So, how should you shut down properly? It's completely up to you, really. If you do a full "Shut Down" (or "Turn Off Computer") your computer will be completely off, using no power at all. "Hibernate" and "Standby" are lower-power states that allow you to resume quickly into the Windows desktop. Standby simply powers down hardware components like the hard drive, monitor, and peripherals, but continues to provide power to RAM, so everything you were doing stays active. Hibernate is closer to a shut down: It saves an exact image of your Windows desktop, then powers the PC down. When you awaken from hibernation, everything is back where you last had it. Personally I'm not a big fan of hibernate, because if I'm going to shut Windows down completely I like to reload everything fresh into RAM, which helps system stability. I tend to use both standby (for shorter times away from my PC) and shut down (for more than a few hours of downtime) instead.

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  • 1 Posted by simoncohen69 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:23PM EDT Report Abuse

    Great info. Now, is there a tool that can log the total time your HD has been in use so that you can "prepare" for that failure which is going to happen eventually?

  • 2 Posted by r.koedyker@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:25PM EDT Report Abuse

    This is a very good article however it misses a few very important points such power surges when turning things on????? There are a number of other components in the computer besides the hard drive and they are vital to to it's operation as well. So lets say you turn the computer off and let these componenets cool down and at cold you zap them with a power surge Hmmmmmmmmmmm ! What might happen is anyones guess. Do you really want to chance it????? How mant times can you do this before something fails???? Hmmmmm ???????

  • 3 Posted by dynodan6076@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:50PM EDT Report Abuse

    i think that if you are running a computer that has good case ventalation, and proper maintance is being done it all depends on the user some maintance programs need your system up dynodan6076

  • 5 Posted by ratawawa on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:29PM EDT Report Abuse

    how do i put my computer into standby or hibernation. im new to using computers

  • 6 Posted by rwm5150 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:57PM EDT Report Abuse

    If you go through the normal shut down... ie click start.. click shut down.. you can select stand by instead of shut down in the window that pops up and that will put the system into stand by mode.. to make your system hibernate you need to go to the start menu.. then settings.. click control panel and then power options and you can set you system to hibrinate automatically

  • 7 Posted by markosians on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:08PM EDT Report Abuse

    Good article Chris, thank you. Guess it's time to change my old thinking about saving hard drives by leaving computer on 24/7/365. I wonder how much electricity (cash money) it might save too? Nick

  • 8 Posted by festrada88 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:59PM EDT Report Abuse

    I tend to use Hibernate a lot because my computer takes forever to boot. A full shutdown implies going through 5+ minutes of booting time. I don't use standby because I have a long commute, so if I forget to plug in as soon as I get home, my battery dies. I only do a full restart about once a week.

  • 9 Posted by rickyfr on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:40PM EDT Report Abuse

    Hibernate is NOT a low power state. It uses no power. It is the same as shutting off the machine, unlike standby. When you select hibernate, your computer writes its memory state to a temporary file before shutting down. The temporary file is read and the computer's memory state is restored when the computer is powered on again.

  • 10 Posted by nissanchris760@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:39PM EDT Report Abuse

    At my work, i leave the computer on all the time and ive never had a problem with that computer. however, my last laptop i shut down and left off whenever not in use. that computer crashed hard and now can not be used for more than 1 hour before becoming instable. Now the new laptop i have i leave on except for when it goes on stand by, but i do notice i have to re boot every so often to maintain stability.

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