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>I have a computer that will go into sleep, but if left in sleep long
> enough ( a few minutes) it will not come out of sleep, either with the
> keyboard, mouse, or power button. It necessitates a power shut off
> (pull the plug) and then reboot, with the expected windows diod not
> shut down properly messages.
>
> The Motherboard is an Asus P5W64 WS Pro
>
> The CPU is a Q6600
>
> There are 2 graphics cards a BFG 8800 GTX, and a PNY Quadro FX4600
>
> Both have the latest drivers from NVIDIA installed (June 1 and June 5)
>
> There is 2G of RAM
>
> The computer was burning out the RAM when getting out of sleep (with
> the overclock on the RAM settings enabled - as per the RAM
> manufacturer specs OCZ). I am now running the RAM at PC2-6400 with all
> the default settings)
>
> I have an RMA motherboard - and this one is doing the same thing that
> the previous was with respect to the sleep (so I don't think it is a
> motherboard issue)
>
> I have another computer with a BFX8600 series graphics card (single
> card), same motherboard, same RAM, and that one has no problems with
> the sleep funtion.
>
> Any ideas out there?
>
I had problems with Vista sleep functions on my desktop HP Pavilion. I had
tried all sorts of combinations of sleep/power settings with no luck. Sleep
had been working until about three weeks after I bought the machine. I
narrowed the problem to actions I had taken on a specific date, where I had
tried to install an old scanner which did not install properly. I
uninstalled everything, but there was an artifact left over in the msconfig
Startup Items list. Although there was no apparent direct connection
between the artifact and sleep, sleep began working after I removed the
artifact from msconfig. So, perhaps a place for you to start is to ask
whether sleep has *ever* worked on your computer? You can learn about your
sleep history in Event Viewer/Windows Logs/System. Within this display, you
can search for events with the Find command, and look for events that have
the words Power or Sleep. This may help you pin down when or if your system
has had events associated with sleep. I am sorry that this description is a
little vague, but that is all I can tell you based on my experience. Hope
it helps!
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