Here are the performance results of this graphics card in both the hardwareDB Benchmark and other benchmark utilities. Synthetic tests are an estimation of real-world performance using consistent and repeatable benchmarks. All tests were performed at 1920 x 1080 resolution.
Flux Core
Volumetric ray casting test, a computationally expensive method of rendering high-quality scenes
51 FPS average
36 FPS 10% low
35 FPS 1% low
Electron
Randomly generated noise sphere test
35 FPS average
36 FPS 10% low
35 FPS 1% low
City
Procedurally generated city scene with voxel rendering
30 FPS average
24 FPS 10% low
23 FPS 1% low
Clouds
Real-time noise calculation and ray marching test
29 FPS average
27 FPS 10% low
27 FPS 1% low
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The Quadro M4000 is a GPU from NVIDIA released in 2015.
This chip has an average gaming score at 11% in our GPU benchmark.
The Quadro M4000 has 8 GiB of GDDR5 memory, with a total memory bandwidth of 187 GB/s. The memory bus has a width of 256 bits. More memory is beneficial when gaming at high resolutions as the memory needs to store the frame buffer and all the game textures. If you run out of memory, you will experience poor performance as the GPU needs to swap data in and out of the memory as it is used.
In terms of clock speed, the Quadro M4000 GPU core runs at a frequency of 800 MHz. The core clock is directly related to the performance of a GPU, the higher the clock, the more processing can be done per second. A higher clock does not guarantee better performance by itself, this also depends on the number of shading units and other elements of the pipeline.
As for rendering API support, the Quadro M4000 supports up to DirectX 12.4. In addition, in cross-platform titles, OpenGL 4.5 features are supported. Higher level APIs such as DirectX 12 give more control to the game developer and can allow them to improve the graphics and performance.
Power and thermals for the NVIDIA Quadro M4000 are a TDP (Thermal Design Power) of 120 watts. This measures the amount of heat the GPU produces when running at 100%. This isn't a measure of power consumption, but it's a good estimate.
To figure out your graphics card specs and performance, download our free GPU Benchmark utility.
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