GPU Health Check

Used GPU health check Singapore
Respawn.sg · Learn

How to Check if a Used GPU is Healthy

5 min read · Updated 2025 · Singapore
Buying a used graphics card can save you hundreds of dollars — but only if the card is actually healthy. A GPU with bad VRAM or a fried thermal pad will fail on you within months, and by then your money is gone.
This guide walks you through exactly what to check, what tools to use, and what red flags to walk away from — whether you’re buying from Carousell, a shop, or anywhere else in Singapore.
Step 01
Visual inspection first
Before you plug anything in, look at the card physically. A lot of problems are visible before you even boot up.
OK

Fans spin freely

Give each fan blade a gentle spin with your finger. They should rotate smoothly with no grinding or resistance.

OK

No burn marks or corrosion

Check the PCB (circuit board) and connectors for any black scorch marks, rust, or white residue from liquid damage.

WARN

Non-original cooler

Aftermarket coolers aren’t necessarily bad, but they suggest the card has had work done. Ask why the cooler was replaced.

FAIL

Bent or damaged PCIe connector

A bent power connector means the card was likely removed or installed carelessly. Walk away — connector damage can cause instability or fire risk.

Step 02
Free tools to test a GPU
These are the tools we use at Respawn.sg. All free, all downloadable in minutes.
Display & artifacts

FurMark

Stress tests the GPU under full load. Watch for artifacting — random coloured pixels or screen glitches — which indicate VRAM or shader issues.

Free
VRAM health

OCCT

Runs a VRAM-specific test that catches bad memory cells. Mining cards often fail here. Run for at least 15 minutes.

Free
Temperature & fans

GPU-Z + HWiNFO

Shows real-time GPU temperature, fan speeds, and clock speeds. Under load, most GPUs should stay below 85°C. Above 95°C is a red flag.

Free
Overall stability

3DMark Time Spy

A gaming-realistic benchmark. Compare the score to the same GPU model online — a significantly lower score suggests throttling or damage.

Free tier
Step 03
Red flags to walk away from
These are the signs that should make you reconsider — or renegotiate hard on price.
01

Artifacting under load

Random coloured pixels, screen flickering, or corrupted textures during FurMark or a game. This usually means VRAM is damaged — often from mining. Not fixable.

02

Temperatures above 95°C at stock settings

GPU running this hot means the thermal paste is dry, the heatsink is clogged, or the cooler is faulty. Fixable but factor in the cost of a repaste.

03

Seller won’t let you test it

Any legitimate seller will let you run a benchmark before paying. If they refuse or rush you, assume something is wrong.

04

Vague answers about mining history

“I only used it for gaming” is the most common lie in second-hand GPU sales. Ask for proof — original purchase receipt, photos of the rig it was in.

05

No display output at all

Could be a dead card, a faulty port, or a driver issue. Don’t pay full price for a card that won’t display until you’ve diagnosed the cause.

Quick reference
Buy, negotiate, or walk?
Buy

Passes all tests

Clean visuals, temps under 85°C, no artifacting, VRAM healthy. Pay fair market price.

Negotiate

Minor issues

High temps, noisy fans, non-original cooler. Factor in S$30–60 for a repaste and negotiate down.

Walk away

Artifacting or VRAM errors

VRAM damage is permanent. No price is worth a card that will fail in months.

Don’t want to test it yourself?

Bring any used GPU to Respawn.sg and we’ll run a full health check — display output, VRAM, thermals, and fans. Free assessment, no obligation.

Scroll to Top