Which series are you getting? Looks like the Aventum X?
What other applications do you use? i use a Revit plugin for lighting calcs (Elum tools) and that scales well with 12+ cores.
At least they tell you RAM speed (but not the timings...) I would inquire about that. Also inquire about what SSD that is. At minimum make sure the SSD has DRAM. Look slike they jsut put their sticker on. Looks like it is PCIe 3.0 only an uses TLC NAND. All newer SSD sue PCIe 4 or even 5. It doesn't list TBW. i doubt it uses DRAM This looks like a very outdated $90 SSD (2TB). I wouldn't buy that, not even for a spare PC. It won't do sustained writing well at all.
You can buy the prime of the prime Samsung 990 Pro 2TB for $160 or an SK Hynix P41 for a bit less. They have DRAM and SLC cache. They run circles around what DigitalStorm put their sticker on.
Are you saving the local Revit file to the local drive? If so, you want a fast SSD.
I don't know if you need the glass panel... but I would be very concerned about the water loop. It is a custom loop and you will need to maintain it. it also isn't clear what components they use. No-name water loop in a PC sounds like a disaster. A $40 Thermalright Peerless Assassin air cooler can cool the Ryzen CPUs well. You really only need water-cooling for Intel.
Since it looks you don't have to go through an IT department, I would build the PC myself, or find a local shop who does custom builds. It really is not that hard and you know what components you get and can get an air cooler and skip all the RGB lighting. It is up to you, some people care about RG lighting and think it gives them a 15% performance boost. Especially red lighting, since red is the fastest color.
If you price out to build the same PC yourself, you will find you can get the same (or better in case of SSD) components for $2-2.5K. Most shops would charge a $150 build fee.
I also would be concerned about the no-name PSU. Over all my years of building PCs (and I keep them a long time), I've never seen failures, except PSU failures. I now only buy PSUs that are very high quality with 10 year warranty. PSU are kind of an invisible component and never get talked about. But they are the most important component. Make sure the PSU at least ha all the protection features implemented properly (many don't!). So if it dies, it at least doesn't kill the rest of the components. A cheap PSU is the most expensive hardware you can buy.
What is the warranty they offer? Because parts I would select typically come with 5 year (SSD, motherboard etc.) warranty, or 10 year (PSU). Looks like they offer 3 years. You are better off using a local shop since they can support you faster without shipping the PC around. Or DIY. They say they replace parts under warranty within 60 days. Is that acceptable to you? if I had to wait 60 days (plus shipping time), I rather pay for the new part out of pocket for a private PC. I assume you use this for billable work... So again, aren't you better off DIYing or using a local shop? In my home I have multiple PCs and a spare PSU, just in case. If something happens, I can keep rolling while I order new parts or get RMA.
https://www.digitalstorm.com/warranty.asp
Revit Version: R2026.2
Hardware: i9 14900K, 64GB, Nvidia RTX 2000 Ada 16GB
Add-ins: ElumTools; Ripple-HVAC; ElectroBIM; Qbitec