Deekay57
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Posts
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Posts posted by Deekay57
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14 hours ago, Andavari said:
Plain and simple 16GB of free available space just isn't enough!
That alone will free many GBs if it's never been cleared out - it's very annoying that it can't be completely disabled from filling up. The built in Windows Disk Cleanup will have to be ran after every Windows updates patch Tuesday to regain space from there.
A 120GB-128GB SSD doesn't really cut it anymore, definitely not with Windows 10, it's too small and doesn't give anywhere near enough space. At least a 240GB-256GB SSD boot drive should be the minimum sized used nowadays. I suppose in a few years the minimum recommendation will bloat into being at least 480GB-512GB.
Weirdly I switched the machine on this morning after being shutdown since Saturday and straightaway there’s only 12gb free???
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12 hours ago, Deekay57 said:
Will do that - some great help here
No errors found
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3 hours ago, hazelnut said:
https://www.lightroomqueen.com/community/threads/onedrive-how-it-gobbled-up-my-hard-drive.35708/
There are many posts online about One Drive eating space.
So as I’ve put One Drive on D HDD do you think that windows still writes to the SSD first before transferring to D drive and leaves like shadow files (my term) that fill the SSD anyway?
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23 hours ago, binaryman said:
Using the MS-Explorer, select the drive, right-click properties
Select tab: Tools
Select: Error checkingand
Run Directory Report as administrator
It will show you where all your space is goingWill do that - some great help here
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9 hours ago, Augeas said:
You could also try Explorer, right click drive, select Disk Cleanup, Cleanup System Files. Windows Update Cleanup will be first on the list, and if you check that and run Cleanup you should save several gbs.
Thanks Augeas, Andavari advised the same
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Thanks Andavari, I’ll try that on Monday when back at work - although I think I might have already done it last week - I know what you mean 128gb ssd is small but it also has 1tb Hard drive
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6 hours ago, Augeas said:
Difficult to say really. I would disconnect from the internet to see if that stabilises things. A CC Analyze will tell you what temp files can be deleted, and if these temp files are huge then before you delete then look at which component holds the huge files, Then post back here.
We are assuming that TRIM is enabled in both the Op Sys and the device? An easy way to check is to run Recuva normal scan on the SSD. If you can see lots of pics and data etc on the deleted files then TRIM is off. If the vast majority of the deleted files are blank/zeroes, then TRIM is on.
Hi Augeas - yes I had a C SSD scan with recuvva and its plain that after moving One Drive to D HDD all the old One drive file are still duplicated in the SSD drive - there are thousands of files from a few kb thru to 50mb and up to 1.4gb - I dont know how to get rid of those because they dont show up in file explorer
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13 minutes ago, hazelnut said:
Please do try one of the softwares I sugguested to see what is eating your space.
Is One drive putting files back on C? Some people do have issues wwith the sync
I think that might be happening but I dont know how to varify that - I'll look on the link you supplied - thanks
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Ok Hazelnut, I had a look at the C drive (SSD) using Treesize, obviously Windows OS occuopies 23gb - but the main cuprit that you cant see thru explorer is the System Volume info and then theres the Programme data. Strangely, after running Treebite to view the drive content the available space is now 16gb?? Previously the Storage Sense (system restore) was set to 99% so I reduced it to 25% perhaps that made a difference
anyway you can see the snip of the C drive contents and if it stays at 16gb free then I'll be happy
Cheers
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2 hours ago, Augeas said:
TRIM is a process which is enabled by default in both the Op Sys and the SSD itself. It doesn't actually affect the disk space parameters, as that is (probably, possibly?) deduced from the cluster bitmap, and will be the same whether TRIM is enabled or not. Something must be using your space so try Hazlenut's suggestions.
I assume you are right clicking the drive in Explorer and selecting Properties to get the space usage figures?
yes thanks Augeas I am right clicking explorer, selecting properties etc
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46 minutes ago, hazelnut said:
Use Treesize or Windirstat to see what is eating up your disk space
HazleNut - Thanks - I'll give that a go
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1 hour ago, Augeas said:
Difficult to say really. I would disconnect from the internet to see if that stabilises things. A CC Analyze will tell you what temp files can be deleted, and if these temp files are huge then before you delete then look at which component holds the huge files, Then post back here.
We are assuming that TRIM is enabled in both the Op Sys and the device? An easy way to check is to run Recuva normal scan on the SSD. If you can see lots of pics and data etc on the deleted files then TRIM is off. If the vast majority of the deleted files are blank/zeroes, then TRIM is on.
Thanks Augeas - What's TRIM is it a windows app or part of CC Cleaner? I did use CC analyze to look at and delete temp files but they only amounted to a few hundred mb
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Hello
Anyone know why the C: SSD 120gb drive on my Dell inspiron 3000 is full and I can find no large files that would fill it. I moved one drive files to the 1tb D drive that had 41GB size but that only reduced the SSD total by 3.5GB and it quickly filled up again in one day
can CCcleaner deal with this - is there anything I can do to increase space in the SSD drive
SSD Full on very new machine
in Hardware
Posted
Thanks Andavari - since doing the things advised on this forum I now have 32 gb free - there 30gb hidden in apps somewhere as the app file reports 32gb size but manually adding up all the individual apps doesnt come to much more than 1gb