All hard drives spinning up even though only accessing system SSD











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This problem is quite annoying. I've just upgraded to Windows 10 and although I experienced it a bit in Windows 7, it seems much worse in 10. I have 2 SSDS (one C drive for Windows and another for apps), plus 3 Western Digital external USB drives and a WD Black 2TB. If the system has been idle for enough time for the drives to spin down, I'll open something like my email client (eMClient) and it will cause all these drives (well, I think all. Obviously a bit hard to tell, but I can hear at least 2-3 starting up) to spin up before it opens, sometimes taking up to 10 seconds. This will be for software that doesn't have links to those drives, hence the mystery. I would understand it if I had saved files on those drives, but it is for software that is entirely contained on the system drive. Obviously this is very annoying and negates the speed advantage of an SSD when I have to wait for platter drives to spin up. I hope that makes sense and grateful for any insight. Cheers.










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  • eMClient is apparently closed-source, so only one of their developers could answer this (or a skilled debugger), but I'd guess they're calling some API to enumerate all storage devices, causing the spin-ups. But that's only a guess. You should probably contact their support.
    – phyrfox
    Aug 15 '15 at 19:56










  • Thanks, but it's not just eMClient that causes this. I'll do a bit more testing to see what else does.
    – Sam Poole
    Aug 16 '15 at 8:48















up vote
1
down vote

favorite
1












This problem is quite annoying. I've just upgraded to Windows 10 and although I experienced it a bit in Windows 7, it seems much worse in 10. I have 2 SSDS (one C drive for Windows and another for apps), plus 3 Western Digital external USB drives and a WD Black 2TB. If the system has been idle for enough time for the drives to spin down, I'll open something like my email client (eMClient) and it will cause all these drives (well, I think all. Obviously a bit hard to tell, but I can hear at least 2-3 starting up) to spin up before it opens, sometimes taking up to 10 seconds. This will be for software that doesn't have links to those drives, hence the mystery. I would understand it if I had saved files on those drives, but it is for software that is entirely contained on the system drive. Obviously this is very annoying and negates the speed advantage of an SSD when I have to wait for platter drives to spin up. I hope that makes sense and grateful for any insight. Cheers.










share|improve this question






















  • eMClient is apparently closed-source, so only one of their developers could answer this (or a skilled debugger), but I'd guess they're calling some API to enumerate all storage devices, causing the spin-ups. But that's only a guess. You should probably contact their support.
    – phyrfox
    Aug 15 '15 at 19:56










  • Thanks, but it's not just eMClient that causes this. I'll do a bit more testing to see what else does.
    – Sam Poole
    Aug 16 '15 at 8:48













up vote
1
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
1
down vote

favorite
1






1





This problem is quite annoying. I've just upgraded to Windows 10 and although I experienced it a bit in Windows 7, it seems much worse in 10. I have 2 SSDS (one C drive for Windows and another for apps), plus 3 Western Digital external USB drives and a WD Black 2TB. If the system has been idle for enough time for the drives to spin down, I'll open something like my email client (eMClient) and it will cause all these drives (well, I think all. Obviously a bit hard to tell, but I can hear at least 2-3 starting up) to spin up before it opens, sometimes taking up to 10 seconds. This will be for software that doesn't have links to those drives, hence the mystery. I would understand it if I had saved files on those drives, but it is for software that is entirely contained on the system drive. Obviously this is very annoying and negates the speed advantage of an SSD when I have to wait for platter drives to spin up. I hope that makes sense and grateful for any insight. Cheers.










share|improve this question













This problem is quite annoying. I've just upgraded to Windows 10 and although I experienced it a bit in Windows 7, it seems much worse in 10. I have 2 SSDS (one C drive for Windows and another for apps), plus 3 Western Digital external USB drives and a WD Black 2TB. If the system has been idle for enough time for the drives to spin down, I'll open something like my email client (eMClient) and it will cause all these drives (well, I think all. Obviously a bit hard to tell, but I can hear at least 2-3 starting up) to spin up before it opens, sometimes taking up to 10 seconds. This will be for software that doesn't have links to those drives, hence the mystery. I would understand it if I had saved files on those drives, but it is for software that is entirely contained on the system drive. Obviously this is very annoying and negates the speed advantage of an SSD when I have to wait for platter drives to spin up. I hope that makes sense and grateful for any insight. Cheers.







hard-drive external-hard-drive windows-10






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asked Aug 15 '15 at 19:01









Sam Poole

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  • eMClient is apparently closed-source, so only one of their developers could answer this (or a skilled debugger), but I'd guess they're calling some API to enumerate all storage devices, causing the spin-ups. But that's only a guess. You should probably contact their support.
    – phyrfox
    Aug 15 '15 at 19:56










  • Thanks, but it's not just eMClient that causes this. I'll do a bit more testing to see what else does.
    – Sam Poole
    Aug 16 '15 at 8:48


















  • eMClient is apparently closed-source, so only one of their developers could answer this (or a skilled debugger), but I'd guess they're calling some API to enumerate all storage devices, causing the spin-ups. But that's only a guess. You should probably contact their support.
    – phyrfox
    Aug 15 '15 at 19:56










  • Thanks, but it's not just eMClient that causes this. I'll do a bit more testing to see what else does.
    – Sam Poole
    Aug 16 '15 at 8:48
















eMClient is apparently closed-source, so only one of their developers could answer this (or a skilled debugger), but I'd guess they're calling some API to enumerate all storage devices, causing the spin-ups. But that's only a guess. You should probably contact their support.
– phyrfox
Aug 15 '15 at 19:56




eMClient is apparently closed-source, so only one of their developers could answer this (or a skilled debugger), but I'd guess they're calling some API to enumerate all storage devices, causing the spin-ups. But that's only a guess. You should probably contact their support.
– phyrfox
Aug 15 '15 at 19:56












Thanks, but it's not just eMClient that causes this. I'll do a bit more testing to see what else does.
– Sam Poole
Aug 16 '15 at 8:48




Thanks, but it's not just eMClient that causes this. I'll do a bit more testing to see what else does.
– Sam Poole
Aug 16 '15 at 8:48















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