Annual Computer Maintenance Guide Melbourne | PC Health Check & Repairs
Your Car Gets an Annual Service — Your Computer Should Too
Why Computer Maintenance Is Neglected — and What It Costs
Most people service their car every 10,000–15,000 kilometres without question — because the
consequences of not doing so are obvious and well-understood. Yet those same people have never once
had their computer serviced, even though it runs continuously, accumulates software and hardware problems
over time, and is carrying an increasingly valuable and irreplaceable load of personal and professional data.
The consequences of computer maintenance neglect are just as real as neglecting a car service, but they are
slower and less visible until they are not: a computer that was fast five years ago has become frustratingly
slow; a drive that was healthy three years ago is quietly developing bad sectors; security software that was
current two years ago is three major versions behind; a battery that held charge for six hours now lasts 90
minutes.
PC Doctor Onsite has developed a comprehensive annual computer health check specifically for Melbourne
households and small businesses — a service that catches problems before they become crises, extends the
working life of hardware, and keeps computers fast and secure through their entire lifespan.
A computer that receives annual maintenance will typically last two to three years longer than an identical
machine that does not — representing significant savings compared to premature replacement.
"In PC Doctor Onsite's experience, a computer that receives regular annual maintenance has a dramatically lower probability of catastrophic failure — the kind that results in data loss — than one that is only serviced reactively when something breaks."
What PC Doctor Onsite's Annual Computer Health Check Covers
Hardware Assessment:
- Hard drive / SSD health check: Using S.M.A.R.T. diagnostic tools to read the drive's internal health indicators — reallocated sectors, read error rates, spin-up time, overall health status. This identifies drives that are approaching failure before they fail, allowing controlled data migration rather than emergency recovery.
- RAM stability test: Running memory diagnostic tools to identify RAM errors that cause random crashes, blue screens, and file corruption — often misattributed to software problems
- CPU and GPU thermal inspection: Checking internal temperatures under load. Computers that run hot (due to dust accumulation or degraded thermal paste) throttle their performance automatically — a significant but invisible cause of slowness.
- Physical cleaning: Removing accumulated dust from cooling vents, fans, and heat sinks using compressed air. Dust accumulation is one of the most common causes of overheating, throttling, and premature fan failure. Laptops typically need this every 1–2 years; desktops every 2–3 years
- Battery health (laptops): Checking battery capacity versus original design capacity. A battery retaining less than 80% of its original capacity significantly affects usability and indicates imminent replacement need.
- Connection and port inspection: Physically checking USB ports, headphone jacks, and charging ports for damage or debris.
Software and Security Maintenance:
- Full malware scan: Running a comprehensive scan with multiple tools including a bootable scanner that operates outside of Windows — capable of detecting rootkits and persistent malware that evade standard on-system scans
- Windows Update verification: Ensuring all Windows updates have been applied successfully — not just that Windows Update shows as current, but verifying there are no failed updates that show as successful in the interface.
- Driver updates: Checking and updating drivers for graphics, audio, network, and chipset components. Outdated drivers cause compatibility issues, performance problems, and security vulnerabilities.
- Application updates: Checking installed applications for outdated versions — particularly web browsers, PDF readers, and productivity software that are common attack vectors
- Startup program audit: Reviewing and removing unnecessary startup programs that accumulate over time and progressively slow down boot times and background performance.
- Disk health and maintenance: Checking drive fragmentation (HDDs), free space levels, and running integrity checks on the file system.
- Security software verification: Confirming that security software is current, active, and has not been disabled or bypassed.
- Backup verification: Testing that backup systems are actually working — running a test file recovery to confirm the backup is genuinely restorable
Recommended Maintenance Schedule by Computer Type
| Computer Type | Full Service | Quick Check | Physical Cleaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Family desktop (heavy use) | Every 12 months | Every 6 months | Every 18–24 months |
| Work laptop (daily use) | Every 12 months | Every 6 months | Every 12 months |
| Home office PC | Every 12 months | Every 6 months | Every 18 months |
| Occasional use laptop | Every 18–24 months | Annually | Every 2–3 years |
| Small business workstations | Every 12 months | Quarterly | Every 18 months |