Waterblock installation and first iteration with bad planning
Now onto the good stuff... Waterblock installation was fairly standard except for the following quirks: I had to cut out some holes in the plastic gasket for the CPU block to accomodate the motherboard capacitor ends, and also mounted the CPU block upside down for the routing. GPU blocks were installed as standard using Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut as the TIM for all blocks.
Hardware Labs GTS Nemesis 240 mm Radiator was installed on the bottom in a pull configuration. I would have personally liked to do a push configuration but this was not possible due to some collisions with the front I/O (which by lifting the radiator up by the fans in the bottom, were cleared)
GPU block installation, thermal paste was spread as per instructions for kryonaut.
D5 pump was mounted onto the rear of the chassis using the fan grill part and the tubing holes (rubber gasket was removed), it is a tight fit, but it works.
Another pair of slim noctua fans to provide some airflow to the board as well as another 120 mm radiator to supplement the cooling performance. In attempt to balance the two exhaust fans under the GPU, these fans are in a intake configuration with the radiator on a push-pull mode.
First iterations with bad planning
Due to some poor planning with cable management, I had to put a drain port via a T-splitter just before the pump, which was a very bad idea and was eventually fixed, but this was the layout that I had used initially that works apart from the drainage system.
Temperatures were quite interesting in that while the GPU went from 76 degrees to 54 degrees (Air --> Water) the CPU went up from the 50 degrees to 75 degrees. It is clear to me that in this case, 360 mm is really the bare minimum to keep a 8700K and 1080 Ti under control. The added heat from the GPU and the power delivery of the GPU makes the system much warmer for the CPU than when it had a dedicated 240 mm AIO. Having said that these are not noise normalized metrics and so the system is much quieter under water.