- #WINDOWS 10 DOES NOT STAY IN SLEEP MODE HOW TO#
- #WINDOWS 10 DOES NOT STAY IN SLEEP MODE INSTALL#
- #WINDOWS 10 DOES NOT STAY IN SLEEP MODE DRIVER#
- #WINDOWS 10 DOES NOT STAY IN SLEEP MODE PRO#
If your computer doesn't stay asleep after this, you might also try entering the BIOS and disable USB waking from there, if you see an option for it. Select Properties and the Power Management tab, then uncheck the Allow This Device to Wake the Computer option and click OK. Once you find the problematic hardware, open the Start menu and search for "Device Manager." Find the device in the resulting list-say, your keyboard-and right-click on it. Keep doing this until you find the offending device. If it doesn’t, you can leave one device plugged in the next time you put it to sleep. If you have trouble figuring out which device is the problem, remove all your USB devices the next time you put your computer to sleep, and see if it wakes up on its own. I’d bet dollars to donuts it's your mouse or keyboard-maybe your cat thinks it's a fun toy when you aren’t looking-but it could be anything. If Windows tells you a USB device is waking your computer, you’ll have to find the offending device. In the sidebar, head to Windows Logs > System, then click the Filter Current Log button on the right side of the window. Click the Start menu, search for "Event Viewer," and launch the tool. I’ve also had luck searching Windows’ Event Viewer for information. If that command didn’t give you useful information, try this one: powercfg -waketimers
In other cases, it may list a specific hardware device, and you can skip down to the relevant section in this article, or do some extra Googling on what settings to change on that device. In that case, your search is over, and you can adjust that program’s settings or uninstall it to stop the problem. For example, the last time my workstation woke up, it was due to my cloud backup program running its scheduled backup for the evening. If you’re lucky, it’ll give you a pretty clear answer. Type the following command and press Enter: powercfg -lastwake Windows knows what woke up your computer most recently, so the next time it wakes up unexpectedly, open the Start menu and search for “cmd,” then right-click the Command Prompt and choose Run As Administrator.
#WINDOWS 10 DOES NOT STAY IN SLEEP MODE HOW TO#
#WINDOWS 10 DOES NOT STAY IN SLEEP MODE PRO#
Samsung 860 EVO 1TB (Primary Data Drive),Īntivirus: Malwarebytes Premium, SuperAntiSpyware Pro (Licensed) Samsung 840 EVO 250GB (System Copy Drive), Hard Drives: Samsung M.2 NVMe 960 EVO 500GB Boot, Mouse: Logitech MX Master 3 Wireless & BluetoothĬooling: Corsair Hydro H150i, 360mm Rad & Five Corsair 140mm Pro ML Case Fans Keyboard: das Keyboard MX Brown Mechanical Switches Model DASKMKPROSIL-3G7-r1.0 Monitor(s) Displays: Asus VP279 27", Samsung BX2431 24" It attempts to tell you what is acting up. If you open a command prompt(admin) or powershell(admin) and type the command Right click Start, click Power Options, on right click Additional Power Settings, click Change Plan Settings beside plan you are using, click Restore Default Settings for this plan. You could also restore power plan to defaults. To get version and build number you can right click Start, click Run, type Winver, enter.
#WINDOWS 10 DOES NOT STAY IN SLEEP MODE INSTALL#
While you are looking in Update History did any fail? Did they subsequently install successfully. Should be listed as one of the the first items when you view Update History. See what has been installed in last month.Īre you running V1903 and if so when was it install.
#WINDOWS 10 DOES NOT STAY IN SLEEP MODE DRIVER#
I would also go to Windows Updates and review the entire list, especially the section on driver updates. Usually if adapter is in trouble Device manager will display with the appropriate section expanded. In device manager you are looking for adapters that have a yellow exclamation mark or any other type of marking on adapter.