Your temperatures are perfectly fine. Computer looks good. You can leave LLC at its default setting and just use more offset voltage instead. Vdroop is part of the design of the chip, so using LLC to counteract it isn't really necessary. For most overclocks, just gradually increment multiplier and slowly increment your offset voltage from a negative value that lets you boot.
A good way to start is set your multiplier to default, set vcore to normal setting and start lowering your offset voltage from +0.000v into the negatives until your cpu-z shows a good 1.10-1.15v voltage under prime 95 load at stock frequency and its still stable, and then increase your multiplier till it fails stability testing at the frequency and same voltage settings, then try either adding more offset or lowering your clock/voltage if you start to hit a heat wall (usually above 90*C and/or 1.35v the chips start to drastically require more and more voltage and start to give off more and more heat). Once you settle on a good clock, you can then try gradually reducing offset voltage to see if it can run at a lower voltage you might have missed.
Your fans are fine. That setting will exhaust and thats what you want. Fans intake air from the front side (the side with the stickers etc) and exhaust out the back side (side with the wires and the crossbeam on the fan housing).