Lots of spinning beach balls. MBP 3,1 OSX 10.8.2

Dear all
I own a 2007 MBP 3,1 2,4 ghz core 2 duo with 6gb of RAM (recently the video card was replaced because of the dreaded nvidia problem known to these devices.. - mind you, only the video card was replaced, not the logic board (was out of warranty by 11 days..)
I used it on OX snow leopard without a problem and OSX Lion too.
But after installing an SSD 180gb from intel and clean installing 10.8.2 i keep having the dreaded beach ball issue. Everytime i open a finder window it stalls and hangs. i have problems switching programms.. (the SSD itself is fast, startup times are near 0)
Activity monitor shows plenty of free RAM (4gb +-) and no page outs.. 90% of the processor is idle, but still it hangs.. it's getting really frustrating..
A clean install has already been done so no 3th party apps are installed..
Any ideas

Filip, the Trim command has nothing to do with. Be aware that you have to reset the Trim command everytime you update the OS. The only "easy" method to set the Trim command is with the latest version of TrimEnabler (2.2) which may not work anymore when the next update comes out, research that before you use it. The older versions of TE are crapware. To do it yourself with Terminal commands (Grant Pannel) is even trickier.  The Intel SSD has Grabage Collection in its controller, thus it is not a big disadvantage when the Trim command is not set.
The 1.5GB/s "problem" is only when the SSD connects, thus setting "never sleep" for the harddrives is a good idea; do not restart too often.

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    I have had many tabs crash, then it crashes the Chrome application, then quickly making my entire Mac unresponsive with a spinning beach ball of death.  I am not sure if it is Chrome or not, as I tend to do most of my work these days in a browser. 
    Have others seen this?  Is there a fix?  What can I do to stop these crashes?

    As far as I've been able to discover, this bug is specific to WebKit browsers running (Chrome and Safari are based on WebKit).  Perhaps it is related to those browsers running plugins (like Flash) and using an IOSurface to pass the rendering data back from the plugin.  This issue was constant on my late 2010 MBP and would freeze the machine entirely once a day.  Having switched to using Firefox or Opera I no longer see ANY messages for "IOSurface: Buffer allocation size is zero".  Thankfully, this also comes without any more freezing when time machine starts up or at any other time.
    It looks like there are a lot of changes going on in WebKit relating to IOSurface usage (http://svnsearch.org/svnsearch/repos/WEBKIT/search?logMessage=iosurface).  Hopefully this will be fixed very soon.

  • Spinning beach ball for 45-60 seconds, then fine

    For several months now, I've had the spinning beach ball issue on my Macbook Pro. Within the first 5 minutes after boot up, the spinning beach ball will occur, seemingly at random (no specific app or action), for 45-60 seconds. While this happens, the system becomes completely unresponsive. But after this occurrence within the first five minutes after startup, it never happens again and everything is fine - until I reboot of course.
    I am running Snow Leopard and this problem was happening before I installed Snow Leopard, so that's not it. But one thing I did do, which I am semi-convinced is the culprit, is I replaced my hard drive with a Seagate 500 mb Momentus drive. The actual model # is SEAST9500420AS. I don't know for sure, but that's around the time this issue first started. I know there is/was a spinning beach ball problem with the newer Macbook Pros and they were attributing it to the hard drive which just so happens to be the same hard drive I now have in my Macbook Pro. There was recently an EFI update that seemed to fix the problem for the newer models, but mine is the first generation right when they went to Intel chips (bought mine in April, 2006). Problem is, if it is my drive, this new EFI update that fixes the issue on the new models won't install on mine.
    I also did a verify disk and repair disk permissions, but that was no help. Another thing I found going through the discussion groups was that the problem could happen because both the Macbook Pro and the Seagate drive have anti-shock technology that could conflict with one another. So if you disabled the anti-shock on the Macbook Pro, it might solve the problem as it seemed to for some folks out there. But I did that and it didn't help either.
    I'm thinking it's my hard drive, but don't know how to fix it. But it could be something I haven't looked at yet or thought of. I've been trying everything the last several months with no luck and it's been driving me batty! What's really strange is it only happens once and always within the first 5 minutes after start up. Anybody have any suggestions? Thanks.

    I just finished doing lots of different tests to try to solve my problem. Didn't resolve it, but I did manage to eliminate some things and narrow it down further.
    First I removed all my login items and restarted my computer. That didn't fix the problem.
    So then I thought it might have something to do with Safari since that's one of the first things I open up when I start my computer and there are numerous reports in the discussions of spinning beach balls with Safari 4.0.3 which I have. So I purposely did not open Safari after startup. Problem still happened.
    So then I thought maybe it has something to do with my internet connection. So I disconnected my internet connection and rebooted. Then I only opened programs that don't use online access. I leisurely opened up a program, did a few things in it, closed it, and then did the same thing with another program. Did some things with Finder. Purposely did not rush things. Waited 4-5 seconds after every operation's completion before executing another task. Never had more than one program open at any given time to eliminate any issue with two many resources open. You guessed it - the problem STILL happened. Not that it matters, but it happened when I hit Command-I on my hard drive icon to get the info pane. A fairly innocuous task. Froze up with the spinning beach ball for at least 45-50 seconds. Tried clicking a few other things while this was happening, but nothing. Once it freed up, a few things I clicked on previously suddenly became active and everything was fine again. Tried Command-I for a lot of different things with no problem. Response was instantaneous.
    It pretty much happens 3-4 minutes into a session and then never happens again. And I think my test here eliminated several possibilities. Very frustrating. I hope this helps someone come up with a possible solution. Thanks.

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