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The never-ending two-step defragmenting process of Vista can soon
become a thing of the past. With certain tools, we were able to cut
defragmentation time of 25 GBs of files with Vista Ultimate
from 82 minutes to
6 minutes!!!
That is
defragmenting 10X faster than the built-in Vista defragmenter! The
tutorial also works with Windows 2000 and XP.
Right now, many things are probably whirling around in your head:
- Is this true? Yes, it is.
- Does it work? Yes. We will show you charts on
hard drive fragments before and after
defragmentation.
- This has got to cost money. Absolutely free.
These “certain tools” we will be using are called
contig.exe and
PowerDefragmenter.
When we used these two programs, the results were as follows:
Hard drive before
defragmenting:
8 minutes later:
However, using the Windows Vista Defragmentation tool took
longer… much longer. To further exaggerate the comparison, we ran
the Vista Defragmentation Tool AFTER we had
already defragmented that same drive with Contig and
PowerDefragmenter. It took 8 minutes alone to analyze the
drive. By now, contig.exe and powerdefragmenter
would have already finished defragmenting a drive. On top of that,
it took Windows Vista
75 more minutes
to
defragment the hard-drive. As you can easily see, the new tools we
will introduce to you will greatly cut your defragmentation
time.
Please note a different tool was used to display the charts
above. The charts did not come from the programs used in the
tutorial.
Tutorial:
Click here to download
Power Defragmenter and Contig. They are both bundled together
here.
What you need to know about contig is that it is a bit different than the other defragment programs out there - it is a single-file defragmenter. It’s strong point is optimizing files that continuously become fragmented. If contig determines that the file can be optimized, it is then moved into the free spaces of the disk.
No installation is required. The next step is to run Power
Defragmenter. Click next, and you will arrive at the
screen below:
You may then select from the following options:
Defragment File(s): Allows you to defragment up
to 4 files
Defragment Folder(s): Allows you to defragment up
to 4 folders
Defragment Disk: Allows you to defragment a
disk
PowerMode(TM) Disk Defragmentation: Defragments at
a power equivalent to two consecutive defragmentations. Time does
not necessarily double.
After you click next, just choose the desired drive, and you’re
good to go.
When you are finished, the command prompt window will read
“Windows Disk Defragmenter…”
This is pretty much the fastest defragment you can ever get with
great effectiveness. If you’re looking for something that is
similar to what Windows Defragment does but at a faster speed, I
would suggest
Auslogics Disk Defragmenter.
Update: This is the only down-side to
contig. It does not really tell you how well the fragmentation
process went but as you could see from the visuals above, it is
quite effective. If you wait 3-5 minutes before closing the window
after the process is finished, the following statistics will be
displayed:
- Hard Drive Space
- Free Space
- Largest free space extent
- Percent File Fragmentation
Follow-up:
Many are saying that Microsoft said it is unnecessary to defragment
NTFS. While that may be true, many are noticing an increase in
performance once they defrag their system, including myself. This
article is a tutorial on how to speed up the defragmentation
process, not one that is asking you to defragment your drive if you
don’t think you need to. To defragment or not to defragment is
entirely up to you. Sorry for all those confused.


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