I think I may just need to adjust the fan settings in the BIOS to be more aggressive. As it is, the motherboard is pretty stupid. Until the P4 gets to that scorching temperature, the case fans are only running at 400RPM. It has a 80mm intake, and 92mm exhaust. When it gets to 69C or hotter, they rev up from 400RPM to 3,000RPM
I'll also check the thermal paste.Oh, and......NICE HEATSINK!

Edit: With the same amount of load, the thing kicks out noticeably less heat. I measured before and after and the exhaust temp is about 4C cooler. I'll take that as a success. When idling, the 12V sits at 12.20V, at 100% load it drops to 12.02V. I thought that was bad but I guess that's just typical group regulation. When the CPU usage is jumping up and down a lot, the 12V does bounce around quite a bit...not sure if I should worry about that or not. There is another slot on the other side of the heatsink to put another rectifier in parallel with the main one. It's being partially blocked by one of the 3.3V rails magamp coils so I'd have to extend the leads on that so the rectifier could fit.
, that we're serious about cooling for them to behave.
) at the alignment of the rectifiers and *thought* it used the 30A rectifier for the 12V but I looked at the traces and it actually uses just a 10A ultra fast recovery diode... What I should have done was just look at the location of the filtering capacitors. The 3.3V trace crosses over the 12V trace via the PI coil for the 3.3V rail. And I *think* the 12V rail uses a PI coil that is strangely over by the -12V wire.
(if he is still reading BCN forums) – I got a new old stock / open box Casing Power MPT-301 PSU on eBay for $4 total. 
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