How to stress test a GPU: A step-by-step guide (2024)

GPU

How to stress test a GPU: A step-by-step guide (1)

By Karthik Iyer

Updated

Your changes have been saved

Email Is sent

Please verify your email address.

You’ve reached your account maximum for followed topics.

Manage Your List

Follow

Followed

Follow with Notifications

Follow

Unfollow

Link copied to clipboard

Sign in to your XDA account
How to stress test a GPU: A step-by-step guide (2)

Stress testing your graphics card is a great way of checking its stability, temperature, and overall performance under load. While running a regular GPU benchmark is enough to understand any improvements or loss in performance, a stress test is better for identifying potential stability issues. There are plenty of ways to generate load to test your GPU's stability, but running a stress test is often recommended as a simple and safe way to perform the ultimate test for your GPU.

A stress test is a great way to find potential failures that may occur in your graphics card due to things like overclocking. It also serves as a troubleshooting method to understand existing problems and narrow their root cause. It's a completely safe procedure as most modern GPUs are designed to throttle down or even shut down when the power limits breach critical levels. You can also set custom parameters such as a temperature alarm, a custom duration for the test, and graphical settings.

Related

How to do a CPU stress test

Here's how you can perform a stress test to check the stability of your processor

How to stress test your GPU with Furmark

Testing the maximum power and heat output

If your main goal with conducting a stress test is to check thermals, then Furmark should be your go-to tool. There's no shortage of benchmarking and stress-testing utilities out there, but most are more focused on testing for pure performance and stability, usually after overclocking. In contrast, Furmark is a tool that attempts to draw the maximum power and heat output from a graphics card. It's not the best for stability, but it's certainly the best for checking thermals.

FurMark is completely free to download and use on your computer. It is quite brutal in pushing the thermal and power limits of graphics cards, and it even displays a warning dialog noting that it's very GPU intensive and can lead to system crashes or other instabilities. Fortunately, you can set custom preset settings and things like high-temperature warnings to ensure you're not pushing your GPU beyond critical limits.

With some graphics cards, Furmark will use resources that cause the card to limit its power before it reaches its maximum clock speed. As such, it's a great representative of thermals, but not of overall stability or performance after overclocking. For testing those departments, switch to something like Superposition.

Here's how you can use FurMark to check for GPU temperatures:

  1. Head to the Geeks3D website and click the Download button to open a new tab.
  2. Select the latest version of FurMark (v2.1.0.2 at the time of writing this tutorial).
    How to stress test a GPU: A step-by-step guide (4)
  3. Click the Download button to get the utility for free from the Geeks3D server.
  4. Install and run the FurMark utility to see a small window with details about the detected GPUs and the options to set preset settings.
    How to stress test a GPU: A step-by-step guide (5)
  5. Set the Graphics Test to FurMark (GL), the Resolution to your native monitor resolution, and enable Display OSI to see all the testing metrics while running FurMark. Click Run to start the test.
    How to stress test a GPU: A step-by-step guide (6)
  6. Run the test for at least 10 minutes and keep a close eye on the temperature and GPU usage.
    How to stress test a GPU: A step-by-step guide (7)

Your GPU temperature will now start to rise as it is stressed. The fans will get louder, and you'll notice a spike in GPU usage and temperature. You can exit the benchmark at any time by closing the benchmark window or by pressing the Escape key on your keyboard with the benchmark window selected.

How to stress test your GPU with Superposition

Testing GPU stability and performance

While FurMark is great for testing the maximum GPU temperature, it's not the best for checking performance gains or stability. If you want to overclock your GPU, you must check the stability of your graphics card afterward. Benchmarks that push GPU clock speeds as high as possible are the best way to check GPU stability. Superposition is one of the best free tools out there for this purpose.

  1. Download Superposition from Unigine's website.
    How to stress test a GPU: A step-by-step guide (8)
  2. After downloading the app, launch the setup wizard to install Superposition.
  3. Choose a Preset for the benchmark. Start with 1080p High to set a baseline. You can run tests with higher resolutions later on.
    How to stress test a GPU: A step-by-step guide (9)
  4. Click the Run button.
    How to stress test a GPU: A step-by-step guide (10)
  5. Wait for Superposition to complete the test. Make sure you're not using any apps in the background, as they can mess with the results or cause crashes.
    How to stress test a GPU: A step-by-step guide (11)
  6. After the test is complete, take a close look at the data. You might want to save the results to compare them with subsequent tests. To do so, hit the Save button to store results on your computer.
    How to stress test a GPU: A step-by-step guide (12)

If you experience any crashes, artifacts, or regular stuttering during the benchmark, this might mean that your GPU isn't at its most stable. This could be the result of an aggressive overclock, high GPU temperatures, or failing components. Try repeating the benchmark a couple of times to see if these issues persist.

Making sense of stress test data

Whether you're using FurMark, SuperPosition, or any other stress testing/benchmarking tool, there's a lot of data to go through. For the most part, make sure you focus on GPU usage, temperature, and framerate. If any of these metrics seem unusual, then there's a good chance that your graphics card has some issues. Fortunately, there are plenty of ways to troubleshoot issues with your GPU.

Related

How to diagnose issues with a GPU

Learn how to diagnose issues on your GPU with our step-by-step guide that will help improve your graphics card performance.

  • Computing
  • Computing Tutorials
  • GPU

Your changes have been saved

Email Is sent

Please verify your email address.

You’ve reached your account maximum for followed topics.

Manage Your List

Follow

Followed

Follow with Notifications

Follow

Unfollow

Readers like you help support XDA. When you make a purchase using links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Read More.

How to stress test a GPU: A step-by-step guide (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Horacio Brakus JD

Last Updated:

Views: 6392

Rating: 4 / 5 (51 voted)

Reviews: 90% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Horacio Brakus JD

Birthday: 1999-08-21

Address: Apt. 524 43384 Minnie Prairie, South Edda, MA 62804

Phone: +5931039998219

Job: Sales Strategist

Hobby: Sculling, Kitesurfing, Orienteering, Painting, Computer programming, Creative writing, Scuba diving

Introduction: My name is Horacio Brakus JD, I am a lively, splendid, jolly, vivacious, vast, cheerful, agreeable person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.