Harddrive has been moved to the middle of the fan
After turning on the machine I was immediately disturbed by the noise it was producing. Stopping the fans one by one (the Noctua ones were hard to stop btw), the main noisemaker turned out to be the GPU cooler. This cooler did keep the GPU quite chilly by the way, just 64C under FurMark Xtreme burn while the core was clocked to 700MHz.
So, 'luckily' I had ordered the Noctua CPU cooler together with the Scythe Musashi cooler
Just taken out of the box:
The victim of this replacement:
And after removing four screws:
Preparing to clean the core of the ... goop Sapphire has used:
That core look shiney when the heatshink is removed :yumyum: Actually looks a lot better than the Intel IHS
Now the photos will take a leap in time

I have tried to fit the cooler in between, but found two things out:
1. I forgot the ram sinks
2. I mounted it the
wrong friggin' way! If I wanted it to fit that way I would have needed to dremel out the PCI brackets in my case xD
At that time I was too grumpy to see the fun of it and did not take a picture. Sadly, because you guys could probably have a good laugh about it
"If the graphic card did not have any original heatsinks on the memory & regulator chips, it is not necessary to attach the chip heatsink." - Musashi VGA cooler installation guide. Screw that. It fits, it could improve performance; I put them on.
So, the TIM (MX-2) applied again, the ramsinks fitted on and the Musashi prepared to be put on.
And fitted
Fitting the whole thing in the case was quite a problem. First the cooler was too *** large to handle properly and also, the knobs of the PCI bracket fan controller could
just not fit through the hole. Not a pleasant suprise when it's 02.00 or so. I took the simple approach and filed out the pci slots.
And furmark with a core clock of 700:
Keepin' her nice and cool

One fan on mid power, other on low. I have recently reinstalled Vista, so the clocking will have to start over again. Maybe I've got time this evening :')
CPU overclocking
I'd like to make one statement first: overclocking the i7 chips is very, VERY easy if you just take the effort to read something about it.
I have been able to get the chip to 3.80gHz without the Turbo, but I sadly lost the screenies of SuperPI and CPU-z. SuperPI time was exactly 11.000 seconds.
The 24/7 clock I have achieved is the following:
Please note that the cpu is not loaded and turbo mode was engaged. Without turbo the CPU runs at 3.5gHz. BIOS vCore is 1.36250.
Temperatures of the Noctua U12P are just great. About 64C highest temperature under load, ambient 19-20C.
Hope you have all enjoyed the log :') If you want pics of any part for your own build or just for the heck of it, just ask.