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PC won't get out of of sleep!

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Hello, My pc will not go out of sleep  :(  :(  I have a 3770 asus h61 MB 8GB crucial ram even with the power button i have to do a cold shutdown!

I already tried ressetting the bios and use pcie in the power mangemant options ect :(

 

Thanks :)

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Does the fan spin up when you wake up the system (hit a key on your keyboard, shake the mouse, or hit the power button)? Or really nothing happens?

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Does the fan spin up when you wake up the system (hit a key on your keyboard, shake the mouse, or hit the power button)? Or really nothing happens?

Nothing ;(

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i think it is somewhere in the control panel i don't really know .......

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Under Windows, search for "Power options". Then select it.
On the Power Option panel will show, on the left column, click on "Choose what the power button does".
Then make sure that the Power Button is NOT set to "Do Nothing" on plugged-in.
Click on "Saved Settings" button, and now try.

Does your computer wake up now? If not.

Lets generate a report.
Open Command Prompt as true Admin.
Then type, and execute (hit Enter): cd C:\
Then type: powercfg -energy

It will start diagnostics of the system sleep feature and generate a report in C:\ It will take 60sec.

 

Once done, can you please Attach the file on your post.

If you are using the quick reply box at the thread, click on "Full editor", then at towards bottom of the page (right bellow the box to type your reply), you have "Attach Files", click on the "Browse" button, select your file, and click on "Attach this file", write your reply and click on "Add reply"

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Under Windows, search for "Power options". Then select it.

On the Power Option panel will show, on the left column, click on "Choose what the power button does".

Then make sure that the Power Button is NOT set to "Do Nothing" on plugged-in.

Click on "Saved Settings" button, and now try.

Does your computer wake up now? If not.

Lets generate a report.

Open Command Prompt as true Admin.

Then type, and execute (hit Enter): cd C:\

Then type: powercfg -energy

It will start diagnostics of the system sleep feature and generate a report in C:\ It will take 60sec.

 

Once done, can you please Attach the file on your post.

If you are using the quick reply box at the thread, click on "Full editor", then at towards bottom of the page (right bellow the box to type your reply), you have "Attach Files", click on the "Browse" button, select your file, and click on "Attach this file", write your reply and click on "Add reply"

Thanks bro i am gonna sleep now ill do it Tomorrow! :)

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Under Windows, search for "Power options". Then select it.

On the Power Option panel will show, on the left column, click on "Choose what the power button does".

Then make sure that the Power Button is NOT set to "Do Nothing" on plugged-in.

Click on "Saved Settings" button, and now try.

Does your computer wake up now? If not.

Lets generate a report.

Open Command Prompt as true Admin.

Then type, and execute (hit Enter): cd C:\

Then type: powercfg -energy

It will start diagnostics of the system sleep feature and generate a report in C:\ It will take 60sec.

 

Once done, can you please Attach the file on your post.

If you are using the quick reply box at the thread, click on "Full editor", then at towards bottom of the page (right bellow the box to type your reply), you have "Attach Files", click on the "Browse" button, select your file, and click on "Attach this file", write your reply and click on "Add reply"

I send it to you in PM :)

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Got it.

Ok first, while it won't fix your problem, you should set your Windows power plan to Balance. Balance allows the CPU to clock faster when you need it but conserve power you don't, reduce system heat and noise, not to mention power requirement. If anything, you have a performance boost from Balance, as the CPU will more cool to allow faster Turbo Boost clocks, as Turbo Boost kicks in bursts. There is no advantage to use High-Performance. The CPU itself controls the clock speed, with the help of the OS, so it knows what you are doing very well, and clock things accordingly.

Second, I see lots of errors, but doesn't mean that they are error that it is bad per se. The big problem on the desktop space, is that manufactures don't test for sleep features. They assume that all desktops are either on or off. Very sad, but that is the reality of things. Some don't or should not affect anything, and others do.

So we need to identify the part that is causing the problem. The problem I have however is that your fans don't spin up and the power light turns solid on when you hit the power button, but you say nothing happens. So to me the motherboard is faulty.

First, Disable Hybrid-Sleep. Open the Power Option panel, then go on "Change plan settings" > "Change advanced power settings", then navigate in the list that you see, to "Sleep" > Hybrid Sleep. Set it to disable, and set the time to 0.

Click on Apply, OK, close.

Restart your system, and now try. Does it wake up?

If the problem is still there.

But just to be sure, we need to isolate everything.

1- Unplug ALL USB devices expect mouse and keyboard. Please use the most basic mouse and keyboard if possible. No printer, no USB flash drive, no USB hub (including monitor one, if any), no external hard drive.

2- Run the powercfg -energy as previously instructes, and see if you have any errors that shows. Did the errors diminish?

3- Put your system to sleep and see if you turn it back on, despite error or not in the report.

4- Now unplug any PCI or PCI-E cards from your system that isn't your graphics card, if you have anything extra

5- Go in the BIOS and disable everything you don't use (Firewire, second Ethernet port, etc).

6- Now test to see. Does it wake up?

If nothing, then I think your motherboard is broken.

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