cb911 said:it might disadvatage your G5 by having slower HD read speeds when it has to spin up again.
but the advantages are that you'll be saving energy, and you might have less drive wear. although that last point is debatable. some people argue that it's better for your hardware to leave it on, then there's no stress on components when the turn on again. but i wouldn't worry about it.
i sleep the hard drives on my PB, both internal and external FW HD's.
i'm not sure if it spins down by itself. 😕 best to be safe and turn on 'sleep HD's' only at night if you want...
cb911 said:JFreak, so all HD's (internal & external ?) do spin down by themselves after 10 minutes? if that's correct, then i guess you only need to use 'sleep HD's' if you want even better energy saving.
cb911 said:whoa! 'break-in'? 😱 😕
this isn't like a new car or anything, you don't have to worry about 'breaking-in' your Mac. 😛 well, unless you've got a laptop, you do have to calibrate the battery... but you'd know that if you had a laptop and had just read the manual anyway. don't worry about 'breaking-in' just use it as you normally would. 🙂
when the HD 'sleeps' i think that it does just spin down.
JFreak, so all HD's (internal & external ?) do spin down by themselves after 10 minutes? if that's correct, then i guess you only need to use 'sleep HD's' if you want even better energy saving.
That would make an excellent freeware/shareware app, but I can't find one which does it currently - although it might be a setting within a larger app (I know there are a lot of tweaking apps out there, but I don't use them, so I'm not familiar with what some of the more robust ones can do).paulwhannel said:As for spinning disks. I wish there was a way to make the drives sleep ONLY between midnight and 7AM... at night, the drives might as well spin down, but during the day, it's really annoying to have to wait for my disks to spin up every time I want to save a file or something.
paul
paulwhannel said:As for spinning disks. I wish there was a way to make the drives sleep ONLY between midnight and 7AM... at night, the drives might as well spin down, but during the day, it's really annoying to have to wait for my disks to spin up every time I want to save a file or something.
A related good idea is to backup between installs, or at least make a backup of your Preferences folder (go to your account->Library, right [or control] click on the "Preferences" folder, and make an archive of it). Since so many problems stem from bad/corrupted prefs files, it can't hurt to keep a few backups available. Disk space is cheap, and the whole folder can be backed up in relatively little space. I'd keep at least two versions around - and preferably offline as well (CD/DVD and/or another hard drive).alexf said:I have read that when you get a new Mac you should let the computer run for awhile - and then start adding apps slowly, one by one, as opposed to all at once.
Well, of course you can do this, but it'd be so much nicer to have it done for you, automatically. Otherwise, you'd need to know beforehand when the last time you'd be using the Mac would be each night.alexf said:Forgive me for stating the obvious, but why don't you just check the "put hard disk to sleep" option before retiring for the night, and then uncheck it when you resume the working day?
jsw said:Well, of course you can do this, but it'd be so much nicer to have it done for you, automatically. Otherwise, you'd need to know beforehand when the last time you'd be using the Mac would be each night.
I don't spin my main drive down, ever, and the secondary one spins down and isn't normally an issue. But some people would want to spin down all drives, I suppose.
Bobcat37 said:Interesting, I just checked my options and the "Put the hard disk to sleep when possible" WAS checked. I guess it has probably been checked since I originally set the computer up when I got it last year.
If it helps at all, I've never noticed the hard drive "waking up" to be too annoying, so I guess I'll just continue to leave it checked...
FYI I have a 1.8 GHZ G5.