CAD & Media Workstation for Schools
One high-spec PC with a real GPU, 32GB+ RAM, and a big monitor. For Fusion 360, Blender, DaVinci Resolve, and podcast / video editing. This one DOES belong in the maker budget.
The slicing PC we recommend borrowing from the media center handles basic 3D printing workflows. This page is different. A makerspace running real CAD, video editing, or podcast work needs a much more capable machine - and this one DOES belong in the maker budget, because the workload is specific to what happens in the space.
The "video / podcast corner with lights and mics" stub from our index page also lives here. The same workstation drives both.
Short version
Specs: mid-tier gaming PC. RTX 4060 / 5060, 32GB RAM, 1TB NVMe SSD, 27" monitor. ~$1,500.
Prebuilt: Dell XPS, HP Omen, ASUS ProArt. School-purchase-friendly with PO support.
Media add-ons: audio interface + USB mics + key lights. Turns one PC into a podcast / video corner.
Software: Fusion 360, Onshape, Blender, DaVinci Resolve. All have free or free-for-education tiers.
Mid-tier gaming PC class build
This looks like a gaming PC because it is a gaming PC - the workload for Fusion 360, Blender, and DaVinci Resolve is basically the same "strong CPU, real GPU, fast SSD, lots of RAM" as modern gaming. The same machine that renders a Fusion 360 assembly smoothly will also edit 4K video in Resolve without dropping frames.
Why a real GPU matters (and why it does not on the slicing PC). Fusion 360 uses the GPU for viewport rendering; a bad GPU means the assembly stutters and the kid loses focus. Blender uses the GPU for Cycles rendering - a render that takes 10 minutes on an RTX 4060 takes over an hour on integrated graphics. DaVinci Resolve requires a GPU for any color grading work. The slicing PC only runs Bambu Studio + Tinkercad, both of which have zero GPU demand.
Why this belongs in the maker budget. Unlike the basic slicing PC (which the media center already owns), a machine at these specs is rare in most schools. The library's computers are for student research and typing essays - they do not have NVIDIA GPUs, and IT will not order one just because the makerspace asked. This is a makerspace-specific tool and it lives in the makerspace budget.
School-purchase-friendly brands
For most schools, PO-friendly prebuilt is easier than custom-built. These are vendors that handle district purchasing well:
- Dell XPS Desktop or Alienware Aurora with RTX GPU. Dell has government and education purchasing programs that handle POs cleanly.
- HP OMEN Gaming Desktop. Same PO story, different brand.
- ASUS ProArt Station. Creator-focused line, color-calibrated displays available as bundles.
- Apple Mac Studio (M4 or M5 Max). Excellent for video. Not great for Fusion 360 (some features are Windows-only).
- Micro Center PowerSpec. In-store Atlanta pickup, good specs per dollar, decent support.
Custom-built caveat: a custom build is $300-500 cheaper for the same specs. A district that allows a parent volunteer to assemble a PC can save real money. Most districts do not. PO-friendly prebuilt is usually the right call even at a price premium.
Podcast + video setup
The same workstation becomes a podcast / video corner with a handful of additions:
- USB microphones (2-4). The Shure MV7 or the cheaper Samson Q2U are the podcast-classroom standard. Dynamic mics reject room noise - they sound good even in a library.
- Audio interface (optional). If you are running more than one XLR mic, a Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 gives you two pro inputs. Not needed if you stick with USB mics.
- Key lights. Two Elgato Key Light Air or generic softbox lights bounce a clean, flattering light on faces. Cheaper than they look.
- Webcam / camera. A Logitech C920 is the safe default. For "real" video, any recent Sony ZV-E10-class mirrorless camera with an HDMI capture card turns the PC into a content studio.
- Acoustic treatment. A few acoustic foam panels behind the mic cut reverb. $60 of foam sounds professional.
- Green screen. A collapsible green screen lets kids chroma-key themselves into Blender renders of their own projects. Surprisingly powerful pedagogy.
The total upgrade cost from "CAD workstation" to "CAD + podcast + video corner" is about $500. Every school that does any kind of student media work should do this.
CAD + modeling + video stack
Every major tool in this space has a free or education-free tier. Real cost to the school: zero if you handle the paperwork.
- Autodesk Fusion 360 - free for educators and students. Parametric CAD, CAM (for the CNC), rendering, simulation. Industry-standard for CTE and engineering.
- Onshape Education - browser-based CAD, works on a Chromebook, free for schools. Preferred when students need to work at home on non-maker PCs.
- Tinkercad - free, browser-based, the entry-level CAD every elementary kid starts on. Graduates to Fusion by 6th grade for serious work.
- Blender - free, open source, does 3D modeling, animation, rendering, video editing, and simulation. The most powerful free tool in the stack. Steep learning curve.
- DaVinci Resolve - free tier is the industry-standard video editor. Studio upgrade is $295 one-time, not subscription.
- Audacity - free audio recording and editing. Easier than Resolve for kids doing podcasts.
Avoid subscription software where you can. Adobe Creative Cloud is $70+/month per seat and locks out a student the moment the district stops paying. The stack above is either free forever or one-time purchase.
What to pair with the workstation
The ergonomics and peripheral investments that make the workstation actually used.
Good mouse + keyboard
CAD is unusable on a cheap keyboard-and-mouse combo. A Logitech MX Master mouse and any quiet mechanical keyboard make a real difference. Budget $100 for both.
Second monitor
Two 27" monitors side by side transforms editing work. Any 27" 1440p monitor for ~$200.
Graphics tablet (optional)
A Wacom Intuos or XP-Pen tablet lets kids draw directly into digital art and animation tools. $60-200.
External storage for project archives
Student video projects eat disk space. A 4TB external drive (or NAS) keeps the workstation SSD fast and the past projects accessible.
Headphones (3-5 pairs)
Video editing without good headphones produces bad sound. Closed-back Audio-Technica M20x or similar are the classroom go-to at $50ish.
UPS (uninterruptible power supply)
One power flicker and 30 minutes of unsaved work is gone. A basic APC UPS gives the PC 10 minutes to shut down gracefully. $150ish, saves you once and it's paid for itself.
What to skip
Common CAD / media workstation mistakes.
Assuming a Chromebook or iPad can do CAD
Tinkercad and Onshape run in a browser; light CAD work is possible on a Chromebook. Fusion 360, Blender, DaVinci Resolve, and any serious 3D modeling tool do not. If your program's CAD ambition is "box with holes in it," a Chromebook is fine. If it is "real parts that fit together," you need a real PC. Plan accordingly.
Agree to Disagree ›Buying a pro "workstation" class PC (Xeon / Quadro) for a school
Dell Precision, HP Z-series, and NVIDIA Quadro GPUs cost 2x-3x a gaming PC with similar real-world performance on Fusion 360 and Blender. The "workstation" branding targets enterprise CAD environments that need ISV certification. A school does not. Buy the gaming-class PC and save $1,500 for more tools.
Agree to Disagree ›Adobe Creative Cloud as the standard video tool
Adobe has locked education pricing behind district-level contracts that small schools cannot access at a reasonable rate. Premiere Pro is the industry standard, but DaVinci Resolve is free, open to any school, and good enough for 99% of student work. Avoid the subscription trap when free alternatives exist.
Agree to Disagree ›Skipping the second monitor
A single monitor "works" but dramatically slows down any CAD, video, or podcast workflow. Timeline on one screen, reference material or tool palette on the other. A $200 second monitor is the best price-per-productivity investment on the whole PC. Do not skip it.
Agree to Disagree ›Building a PC from Amazon parts by a parent volunteer
This is almost always a bad idea for schools. District purchasing rules usually prohibit it. When a component fails, nobody owns the warranty claim. A prebuilt from Dell or HP at $300 more is cleaner, safer, and PO-friendly. Save the parent volunteer energy for programs the school cannot buy off the shelf.
Agree to Disagree ›Running CAD on a laptop plugged in permanently
A gaming laptop thermally throttles after 10-15 minutes of Fusion 360 render time. A desktop does not. If the workstation will live in one place (which it will), buy a desktop, not a laptop. Save the laptop purchase for scenarios where the PC needs to travel.
Agree to Disagree ›All the links
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