HDD clocks out at 100% while under load.

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For the past 4-5 months now my PC has been maxing out it's HDD while under load, mostly while gaming. This is causing games to stutter and lag behind really bad at random points. We have tried all of the common troubleshooting google has to offer like disabling some windows features, playing games at lower settings, reinstalling windows & a full factory reset, the problem still persists. One thing I was curious about was if terrible internet could be the problem but I'm not sure what relation that has to the HDD. I would appreciate any knowledge on the issue and any response is appreciated. I'm also sorry if this isn't the correct place to be posting this thread.
 
Can you explain maxing out the hard drive , the only time a hard drive is relevant in gaming is when loading to the memory.

What hard drive is it ?

Can you also list your system spec.
 
If you look at performance monitor whilst it's under load, you'll see down to the individual processes who's doing lots of I/O.

That'll be your best starting point, as depending on what the process is will depend on what you can do about it.
 
NVIDIA GTX 1060 3gb
AMD Ryzen 3 1300x quad-core 3.50GHz
8gb RAM
MSI B350M pro-vd Mboard

Hard drive is a 1TB Barracuda ST1000DM010, 7200rpm, 64mb, SATA 6.0GB/s

What I mean by "Maxing out" is that while viewing HD performance/processes, it seems to hit 100% load at points and that seems to be when the games would start to stutter.
 
NVIDIA GTX 1060 3gb
AMD Ryzen 3 1300x quad-core 3.50GHz
8gb RAM
MSI B350M pro-vd Mboard

Hard drive is a 1TB Barracuda ST1000DM010, 7200rpm, 64mb, SATA 6.0GB/s

What I mean by "Maxing out" is that while viewing HD performance/processes, it seems to hit 100% load at points and that seems to be when the games would start to stutter.
You should get an sdd you have an old mechanical hard drive which takes time to load things.

Does your motherboard have an m2 slot ?

You should also download Msi afterburner and monitor cpu and gpu usage.

8 gb is ok but 16gb of ram is the sweet spot for gaming.
 
As far as I know the MB doesn't support m2 expansion. Let me clarify something real quick. It's my partner that is having these issues and I've just been talking through her to make things easier. My system has been booting and running games from mechanical drives for some time now and I have never had this issue unless I'm running games on ultra settings sometimes. I just don't see how playing the older games that we do would cause her hardware to cause such an issue. It's not like it's a constant thing while playing, it just happens enough for it to be annoying as all hell.
 
Here's the thing. My partner has better PC specs than I do and I never have this issue while gaming
Well you need to check with what i previously recommended, the biggest bottleneck in that system is the hard drive .

Cpu usage, gpu usage, memory usage also.

Lower gaming resoloution see if it stutters.
 
Upgrade from 8GB to 16GB, it should put less demand on HDD due to caching.

Or use a USB memory stick and setup ReadyBoost, it helps if you have a USB 3 stick.

Don't knock the Readyboost suggestion above, Readyboost does really work as I've monitored it's performance and does help HDD only systems.
 
We are currently monitoring the disk queue for spikes to verify the bottlenecking. Wouldn't an SSD upgrade be more beneficial overall and provide more benefits ?

Yes SSD is best, but a Readyboost usb stick can be setup in 30 seconds providing you a USB stick handy and could solve part of the problem instantly.
 
Yes SSD is best, but a Readyboost usb stick can be setup in 30 seconds providing you a USB stick handy and could solve part of the problem instantly.

Readyboost is designed for systems with very low amounts of RAM, like <2GB. It's really not the solution here. Especially when an SSD can be had for less than £20.
 
Readyboost is designed for systems with very low amounts of RAM, like <2GB. It's really not the solution here. Especially when an SSD can be had for less than £20.

That's not true, I've monitored and posted results on this forum of what it does, I once tested with a 32GB HDD only system.
 
After reading about it, it does seem like it's designed to help give you a boost if you're lacking on the memory front. However, 8gb of memory really shouldn't be an issue for games that don't require a Nasa PC to run
 
Just taken this screen shot, showing Readyboost working on a 64GB computer.

The chart is showing cache hits taking load from all HDD's

https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/p...aHqdqI_ZFFJMuKkUO6TPUsV1FhPjKl0=w1059-h624-no

People that say Readyboost does not work, or only works on low memory computers it's just dis-information.

Also note, less than 25% of the 64GB is in use, yet Readyboost still giving cache hits, taking load from the HDD.

Other then these charts, I'm a software dev, and have timed the improvement Readyboost made to compile times on large amounts of code contained on HDD.
 
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Just taken this screen shot, showing Readyboost working on a 64GB computer.

The chart is showing cache hits taking load from all HDD's

https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/p...aHqdqI_ZFFJMuKkUO6TPUsV1FhPjKl0=w1059-h624-no

People that say Readyboost does not work, or only works on low memory computers it's just dis-information.

Also note, less than 25% of the 64GB is in use, yet Readyboost still giving cache hits, taking load from the HDD.
Not to discredit any of your findings but to me it just seems like a waste for my situation when an SSD would provide way more benefits over a HDD
 
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