


Have one of those in my laptop, it runs Enscape, that's pretty much it. Number 2, is on the very minimum I would consider when it comes to GPU and memory and I have no idea what that PSU brand is, but if you feel good about it, then sure.Īnd there is no case listed there, so don't forget those, this will add another 50 dollar if you get a really cheap one.Ī RTX2060 will not be very nice in Enscape. 16GB system RAM is, I'd offer (without knowing your user's use case) base-minimum - you can certainly run Revit, but when/if your model datasets get bigger, you'd welcome more (obvs).Your SSD choice is solid (though you don't mention if they're the NVMe M.2 or SSD variant).For Enscape, IME, gpu with more onboard memory perform better over purely-faster models (again, use-case/model-size, dependant) - we run 2070Ss & 1080s at our office, and unless you're hell-bent on raytracing, I can't tell the difference (visually) - though the 2*** series cards do feel nippier, and 3*** cards (way out of budget) will obviously trump them.Adobe, Microsoft etc) you need to gun for best-spec blue-team cpus Drop the dual xeon's - for Revit (primary use case) you (still) want the best single-threaded performance cpu - which also (often) negates Ryzen-based builds - though if users will be dabbling in other "more general" task-work, multi-thread performance can be a boon - again, it all comes down to use-case, for a purely raw-Revit-machine w/ no app crosstalk (i.e.but to add to what you may have already gleaned from your reading thus far: Opinions vary - and your user's use case will (obvs) drive the final build spec.
