Best defrag?

desura

Diamond Member
Mar 22, 2013
4,627
129
101
Been doing some maintenance on my windows 10 pc. Right now the hard drive is defragging with defragging, it is giving times of like a day and a half remaining. What are the best defraggers? Noticeably better than built in Windows defrag?
 

Dahak

Diamond Member
Mar 2, 2000
3,752
25
91
And what exactly is wrong with the built-in Defrag util?
While good, sometimes it not aggressive enough as I have seen files that where still largely fragmented after running the built in defrag, vs say running defraggler

Personally I do not worry about it too much anymore.


Also it should be noted that if its a SSD, you should not need to run a defrag utility
 

Yakk

Golden Member
May 28, 2016
1,574
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Used to run an old version of Smart Defrag which ran continuously in background. Unfortunately they moved this feature behind a pay wall in the last few versions, but you should still be able to give an old version.
 

Tweak155

Lifer
Sep 23, 2003
11,449
264
126
I thought the whole concept of defragging went away with FAT32... Never even thought to use it on NTFS.
 

desura

Diamond Member
Mar 22, 2013
4,627
129
101
Well, I've run O&O about four times already on my HD. Pretty noticable improvements. My hard drive was so messed up that even with an SSD booster it was taking like 5 minutes to fully boot up.
 

Puffnstuff

Lifer
Mar 9, 2005
16,256
4,930
136
I'm using Defraggler myself and apart from only being able to defrag one drive at a time I like it. Sure beats the built in defrag software or paying for a 3rd party utility like perfect disk like I've used in the past.
 

TheRyuu

Diamond Member
Dec 3, 2005
5,479
14
81
Also it should be noted that if its a SSD, you should not need to run a defrag utility

More like you should not run a defrag utility on an SSD full stop. You can run the Windows Disk Optimizer utility on an SSD on the more recent versions of Windows (8+ I think) since that simply goes through and does TRIM.

Unless you're dealing with a drive which is >90% full the built in defrag util should be able to do a pretty good job. Unless you have some extremely odd usage patterns or the drive is extremely full I still fail to see a reason to use anything else but the built-in tool for this. Even for cases with a boot drive Windows already has built-in mechanisms to speed up booting up and application start times with its preloading ability.