@Touchclarity: Hopefully we'll get somewhere

@gecco:
gecco wrote:
I did however try Ubuntu linux, not for very long, but the problem did not seem to be the same in linux. The HDD-activity light was off when the HDD was idling and I did not experience the stutter/lag that I do in windows. I'm back in windows now and the HDD-activity light is constantly blinking on and off just to mention the difference.
So that suggests some possibilities to me, including:
(a) Perhaps the unexpected disk I/O is from something running under Windows (e.g.. virus scanner etc.). IMHO this is quite likely. On a new laptop, there can be pre-installed rubbish/unnecessary software, which you don't know about because you didn't install it. You could investigate the Autoruns utility, to see what software is being started automatically by Windows.
or
(b) Perhaps the lack of the same behaviour under Linux is due to Linux not accessing the disk in exactly the same way (e.g. if there is a marginal sector which is read often by Windows, it may not be read when using Linux, so Linux may not trigger a problem which is provoked when using Windows). IMHO this is less likely, but we can't yet say this is definitely a Windows-related issue, although it might be...
As I said before, Windows support is off-topic here, but you can use utilities like Filemon to see if you can identify whether an application is causing lots of I/Os at the times of the pauses. Also using Windows Performance Monitor may give you useful info. FYI I have seen significant pauses with network-related Windows issues/mis-configuration in the distant past, but I'm not going to remotely diagnose a Windows-related problem now.

Another tool for investigating disk drive health, which may be useful in this situation due to that Linux test result, is MHDD from this website, since it can be run from a bootable CD (it runs under DOS). You would need to change your SATA HDD controller into IDE/compatibility mode, before booting MHDD, if that is not its current setting.
You could then perform a read scan (F4 key) to check for slow or unreadable sectors, without Windows being involved at all (this will be different conditions than using HD Tune, which you've done already, although those HD Tune results will still be interesting, when you can supply them).
There is one type of test which hasn't been mentioned so far, and that is a
write benchmark. Very rarely I've seen disks which are slow to write. I doubt that this problem is involved here, and of course, it needs a full (and verified) backup to be taken first - but I just wanted to mention it.
It is impossible to eliminate something (e.g. the disk) as the cause of a problem, if all tests show "good" results - those tests might not be accessing the disk in the way which is needed to provoke a genuine problem. However in your case, you might need to go and get some Windows help, if you can only provoke the problem under Windows - even without being able to prove that the disk is perfect.
One other test you could perform (although this is some effort for you), is to clone your current disk onto a different (but similar) disk, install that different disk in your laptop, and see if the same behaviour is seen when booting from that different disk. If the same behaviour is seen with a diifferent disk, then except for one rare possibility, that usually means that the disks are not the cause of the problem.
I look forward to seeing that data from your earlier tests
