Solved Slow SSD Boot with long OtherKernelInitDuration delay

Last night I decided to defrag my HDD with Smart Defrag 2 and it apparently did something to fix my boot times.

BootTsVersion 2
BootStartTime 2011-11-01T15:00:58.687500000Z
BootEndTime 2011-11-01T15:02:45.402343700Z
SystemBootInstance 717
UserBootInstance 702
BootTime 29322
MainPathBootTime 10922
BootKernelInitTime 19
BootDriverInitTime 440
BootDevicesInitTime 911
BootPrefetchInitTime 0
BootPrefetchBytes 0
BootAutoChkTime 0
BootSmssInitTime 3169
BootCriticalServicesInitTime 631
BootUserProfileProcessingTime 480
BootMachineProfileProcessingTime 1026
BootExplorerInitTime 1143
BootNumStartupApps 21
BootPostBootTime 18400
BootIsRebootAfterInstall false
BootRootCauseStepImprovementBits 0
BootRootCauseGradualImprovementBits 0
BootRootCauseStepDegradationBits 0
BootRootCauseGradualDegradationBits 0
BootIsDegradation false
BootIsStepDegradation false
BootIsGradualDegradation false
BootImprovementDelta 0
BootDegradationDelta 0
BootIsRootCauseIdentified false
OSLoaderDuration 3074
BootPNPInitStartTimeMS 19
BootPNPInitDuration 1002
OtherKernelInitDuration 84
SystemPNPInitStartTimeMS 1077
SystemPNPInitDuration 349
SessionInitStartTimeMS 1436
Session0InitDuration 1516
Session1InitDuration 247
SessionInitOtherDuration 1405
WinLogonStartTimeMS 4605
OtherLogonInitActivityDuration 3666
UserLogonWaitDuration 4764

I don't know what it did but it worked so I'm not complaining.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Desktop.
OS
Windows 7 Home Professional 64 bit
CPU
Intel Core i7 920
Motherboard
Evga 141-BL-E757
Memory
6 GB(3x2GB) Mushkin
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia Gtx 570
Sound Card
Integrated
Monitor(s) Displays
Asus VH236H
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
OCZ Vertex Turbo - Boot Drive
Western Digital 1TB - Storage Drive d
PSU
Corsair 850
Case
Corsair 800D
Keyboard
Logitech G15
Mouse
Razer Deathadder
Internet Speed
Cable
I realize this is an old thread, but I had a similar problem to Raillex's. I noticed a boot delay with an SSD boot drive and a Seagate HDD for data. I was seeing boot times around 17 seconds at first. Because I was setting up a new system, I didn't pay attention when the boot times increased to about 40 seconds because there were many reboots required for updating drivers and such. But the boot time remained over 40 seconds after the setup, so something was wrong. After searching off and on for months, I finally found this forum. I looked back at my Event Viewer's performance logs from August 2011 (when I assembled the computer) and saw the SessionInitOtherDuration during boot took about 25 seconds.

I had also performed an image of the SSD using Windows Backup after everything was configured and stored this on the Seagate HDD data drive. The time stamp on that backup folder is Aug 26, 10:20pm. The boot at 10:09pm (before creating the image) shows SessionInitOtherDuration at less than 1 second. Starting with the next reboot at 11:45pm, I had a 25 second delay with SessionInitOtherDuration. In my opinion, this is a pretty good implication that Windows Backup is doing something to cause this problem.

I was going to try the Clean with Diskpart Command solution mentioned earlier in the thread but decided first to try removing the "System Volume Information" folder and the folder where my image backup was stored from the HDD. I had to move the HDD to a different machine. Then I had to play with permissions and run a command prompt as an administrator to delete the folders. But, after reinstalling the HDD in my main system, the boot delay is gone! SessionInitOtherDuration is back to around 1 second without having to copy all the data off the drive first.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core i7-2600K 3.4 GHz
Motherboard
Asus P8Z68-V Pro
Memory
16 GB DDR3 Corsair Vengeance LP
Graphics Card(s)
Asus ENGTX560 Ti DCII Top
Sound Card
Onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell U2410
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1200
Hard Drives
OCZ Vertex3 120GB SSD -
Seagate 2TB Barracuda XT
PSU
Corsair AX750
Case
Lian-Li PC-8FIR
Cooling
Noctua NH-U9B SE2
Either both of us committed the exact same "user error," or maybe, just maybe, there's something to our theory regarding Microsoft Backup. What I do know is that I've used the free Acronis True Image program several times since my last post and never experienced a boot delay issue.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home 64bit
CPU
Intel Core i7-2600K
Motherboard
ASUS P8Z68-V PRO
Memory
16GB CORSAIR Vengeance DDR3 RAM
Graphics Card(s)
MSI Twin Frozr II Radeon HD 6870
Sound Card
Creative X-Fi XtremeMusic
Monitor(s) Displays
ASUS VE276Q
Hard Drives
Crucial M4 CT128M4SSD2 SSD /
Western Digital Caviar Black WD2002FAEX
PSU
CORSAIR HX850 PSU
Case
LIAN LI PC-K9B
Cooling
ZALMAN CNPS9900MAX
Add it to the list of other problems with Win7 Backup Imaging. It definitely needs improvement.

Acronis is a good alternative with a free version available if your have any WD or Seagate HD's in the mix. Otherwise Macrium Reflect seems to be the top choice around here.
 
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