Fan blowing in or out has been alway a big debate.
When designing BIG power amplifiers, my colleagues and I discussed a lot about this, and resorted to test temperatures inside the amplifiers, with both airflow directions.
The result was this: the fan must BLOW IN , if we are searching for the better heat transfer.
The reason are two:
first: the heat removed is proportional to air MASS, not to air VOLUME, cold air is denser than hot hair, so the fan must move cold (external) air inside the hot internal space of the equipment.
We measured temperatures 5 to 10 °C lower in a 2 KW amplifier.
second: the fan's motor and bearings will live longer if their temperature is lower, so it must move cold air.
I see two (lower value) advantages for fan blowing out:
first: a lower noise level, due to the fan's blades being farther from case's grille when blowing out.
second: dust, cat's fur and other pollution are evenly dispersed inside the case, and not clogging the intake fan, but this depends on intake fan's speed: a low-speed, large fan remains usually more clean than a fast, small one.