Galvanized -- your projects are well-planned. Don't know if I have the patience . . .
Positive pressure is especially great if, as Galvanized suggests, you can seal or vent anything in the case. You can more effectively focus air on key components and duct away the heat.
Sometimes the pressure can be so great that smaller intake fans that are low-volted seem to be cancelled out. These areas could probably work with a reversal of fan direction -- flipping the fan over. If the fan has minimal impact on case pressure anyway, it becomes a logical choice for conversion to exhaust purposes.
Figure that the higher the air-pressure maintained inside the case, the more air will eventually force its way out through openings you would like to cool further but lack the means -- as with a low-rpm PSU fan controlled by a PSU temperature sensor. This would mean greater noise and rpm at the intake side, but provide advantages for lower rpm and noise at the exhaust side. One would like to turn this situation around, so we strive for large 120mm in the front, and while a 120mm in the rear would be ideal, it's a better place to locate pairs of smaller, noisier fans. But the air pressure, with no other place to go, is going to go out through those noisier rear fans, anyway. That would mean you could probably reduce the rpm of those fans through use of a controller or software-driven PWM tool like SpeedFan.