No hibernation or sleep after upgrading to SSD

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  1. Posts : 7,349
    Windows 7 HP 64
       #11

    I have many brands of SSD's and hibernate and sleep works on all them.

    Lets try a CMD. Open a CMD window as admin and type
    powercfg -H on

    If you type
    powercfg /?
    It will list all power config. At Hibernate it says "Hibernate timeout is not supported on all systems"
    It may be your case.
      My Computers


  2. Posts : 14
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit
    Thread Starter
       #12

    Megahertz07 said:
    If you type
    powercfg /?
    It will list all power config. At Hibernate it says "Hibernate timeout is not supported on all systems"
    It may be your case.
    "powercfg /?" is the help file, not a system request or system command. Any machine that you put that command on will return the same help file that all say "Hibernate timeout is not supported on all systems." Unfortunately, the first 16 lines of the help file don't appear at the top because it drops off by the time it gets to the end of the file. I was able to copy and paste it into a .txt file and hit the break key as soon as I hit enter to stop it and capture the first several lines of the file. I've attached it here.

    Here is what I get using -AvailableSleepStates or in this case, the short version -a:

    C:\Windows\system32>powercfg -a
    The following sleep states are available on this system: Standby ( S3 ) Hibernate Hybrid Sleep
    The following sleep states are not available on this system:
    Standby (S1)
    The system firmware does not support this standby state.
    Standby (S2)
    The system firmware does not support this standby state.

    Using "powercfg -devicequery wake_armed" returns nothing.

    Here's another one with the copy and paste results:

    C:\Windows\system32>powercfg -devicequery wake_from_any
    Logitech Driver Interface
    USB Input Device
    HID Keyboard Device (001)
    Generic USB Hub
    ACPI Power Button
    Intel(R) 7 Series/C216 Chipset Family USB Enhanced Host Controller - 1E26
    Realtek High Definition Audio
    HID-compliant device (004)
    Logitech HID-compliant Unifying device (001)
    USB Input Device (006)
    HID-compliant device (005)
    Xeon(R) processor E3-1200 v2/3rd Gen Core processor PCI Express Root Port - 0151

    HID-compliant mouse
    Intel(R) 7 Series/C216 Chipset Family USB Enhanced Host Controller - 1E2D
    Logitech Unifying USB receiver (001)
    Logitech Driver Interface (004)
    Logitech Driver Interface (005)
    Intel(R) USB 3.0 eXtensible Host Controller
    UMBus Enumerator
    Logitech HID-Compliant Keyboard (001)
    USB Composite Device (002)
    HID-compliant device (010)
    Intel(R) Management Engine Interface
    Logitech HID-compliant Unifying keyboard (001)
    Logitech Driver Interface (006)
    HID-compliant consumer control device (003)
    Logitech Driver Interface (008)
    USB Root Hub
    Intel(R) USB 3.0 Root Hub
    Intel(R) 7 Series/C216 Chipset Family PCI Express Root Port 1 - 1E10
    USB Root Hub (001)
    HID-compliant consumer control device (005)
    Logitech HID-compliant Unifying device (003)
    Logitech USB Input Device (001)
    HID-compliant device (014)
    Microsoft Virtual WiFi Miniport Adapter
    Intel(R) 7 Series/C216 Chipset Family PCI Express Root Port 2 - 1E12
    Intel(R) 82801 PCI Bridge - 244E
    Logitech Driver Interface (010)
    Generic USB Hub (002)
    Logitech HID-compliant Unifying device (004)
    HID-compliant device (020)
    USB Composite Device (006)
    HID-compliant consumer control device (010)
    High Definition Audio Controller (001)
    HID-compliant device (021)
    Logitech HID-compliant Unifying Mouse (001)
    Generic USB Hub (003)
    USB Input Device (015)
    Realtek PCIe GBE Family Controller

    Does that give any clues? That's too much information for me to sort through especially since I don't know what most of it is.
    No hibernation or sleep after upgrading to SSD Attached Files
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 7,349
    Windows 7 HP 64
       #13

    Did you run
    powercfg -H on

    C:\Windows\system32>powercfg -a
    The following sleep states are available on this system: Standby ( S3 ) Hibernate Hybrid Sleep
    The following sleep states are not available on this system:
    Standby (S1)
    The system firmware does not support this standby state.
    Standby (S2)
    The system firmware does not support this standby state.

    Some computers has on BIOS a Power tab.
    There you may have the option to set
    Standby (S1) and Standby (S2)
      My Computers


  4. Posts : 14
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit
    Thread Starter
       #14

    Yes, I've done the "powercfg -h on" several times. There is never anything returned except the prompt, so I don't know if that is doing anything or not.

    Going into the BIOS:
    ACPI Standby State [S3] (the ONLY other option is S1)

    Power Management Setup
    EuP2013 [Disabled]

    Wakeup Event Setup
    Wakeup Event By [BIOS] other option is [OS]
    Resume By RTC Alarm [Disabled]
    Resume By PCI or PCI-E Device [Disabled]
    Resume From S3 by USB Device [Enabled]
    Resume From S3/S4/S5 by PS2 Mouse [Disabled]
    Resume From S3/S4/S5 by PS2 Keyboard [Disabled]

    Keyboard is USB, mouse is wireless, so USB bluetooth. Also, wireless network adapter is USB. Those are the only USB connections.

    This makes me wonder if the wireless adapter could be causing the issue. However, it didn't cause an issue with the old spinning platter hard drive.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 9,600
    Win 7 Ultimate 64 bit
       #15

    samuria said:
    You don't hibernate or sleep SSD and it will stop you doing it. There is nothing to be gained hibernate as it won't boot any quicker but it will wear out the drive the less you can write to the drive the longer it lasts all my SSD are set the same by default
    Horsefeathers! You most certainly can hibernate a computer running on an SSD ans the SSD won't prevent you from doing so. I occasionally hibernate mine. Unless you hibernate multiple (as in dozens) times a day, it won't reduce remaining write life enough to worry about.

    There are plenty of reasons for hibernating a computer with an SSD. The two top reasons I do are when I'm going to be away from the computer for a while and I have ongoing work I don't want interrupted, and hibernation is what my UPS uses to essentially save any work I have going on when there is a power outage.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 9,600
    Win 7 Ultimate 64 bit
       #16

    samuria said:
    I suspect Windows does it like it disables defrag all PC from top makers have it set that way depends on the type of SSD chips it doesn't do the drive any good so it makes sense not to write gigs of Data to it as it starts fast enough from scratch and shuts down fast
    Seriously?
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 14
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit
    Thread Starter
       #17

    Lady Fitzgerald said:
    Horsefeathers! You most certainly can hibernate a computer running on an SSD ans the SSD won't prevent you from doing so. I occasionally hibernate mine. Unless you hibernate multiple (as in dozens) times a day, it won't reduce remaining write life enough to worry about.

    There are plenty of reasons for hibernating a computer with an SSD. The two top reasons I do are when I'm going to be away from the computer for a while and I have ongoing work I don't want interrupted, and hibernation is what my UPS uses to essentially save any work I have going on when there is a power outage.
    I agree, I just want to be able to turn off the computer and save my work. I don't really care if it shortens the life of the SSD. The time to failure is so much longer than the old platters that it doesn't really matter. With the SSD, the computer will now cold boot in 15 seconds which is still less time than it took to come back from hibernation. Now, if I could just get it to hibernate I'd be a happy camper.
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 9,600
    Win 7 Ultimate 64 bit
       #18

    BobNanner said:
    I agree, I just want to be able to turn off the computer and save my work. I don't really care if it shortens the life of the SSD. The time to failure is so much longer than the old platters that it doesn't really matter. With the SSD, the computer will now cold boot in 15 seconds which is still less time than it took to come back from hibernation. Now, if I could just get it to hibernate I'd be a happy camper.
    Have you tried resetting the power button to work normally and activate Hibernate by using the Shut Down menu when you click the Windows button or click the Windows key?
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 7,349
    Windows 7 HP 64
       #19

    The C:\Windows\System32\shutdown.exe /h puts the computer to hibernate

    Create a shortcut and paste the above command line. See what happens.
      My Computers


  10. Posts : 14
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit
    Thread Starter
       #20

    Lady Fitzgerald said:
    Have you tried resetting the power button to work normally and activate Hibernate by using the Shut Down menu when you click the Windows button or click the Windows key?
    That's how it worked before. I have the power button set to hibernate, the screen goes blank and then it pops back on in 2 seconds. If I hook up the old platter and boot from it, that's what it will do. That tells me that it's probably not something in the BIOS. But, when I cloned the hard drive, it quit working with the SSD. All of the settings in Windows 7 were the same. There is a setting somewhere that causes it to not work with the SSD. Finding that setting is the problem. Or, could it be something that is bad with the SSD?
      My Computer


 
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