Obviously I would since I have one. However, you need one that has a high CFM rating. I recommend you look around your local junk yard and put the one I have in. If you want a new one, you can get them from Ford. A lot of the ones sold on the market have too low of a CFM rating for a 5.8L engine and I have read numerous complaints by people who have installed them about poor cooling, especially if they are off roading on hot days. I run mine at high speed no matter what atmospheric conditions exist when it comes on.
Saving horsepower is a little inaccurate. What it does is take a little less HP to run the truck down the road which gives a small improvement on gas mileage since you aren't expending the energy slinging a fan around. The Hp you don't use on the fan is then available to the drive train when needed. If you were to run the electric fan full time, you wouldn't save anything since the load would only be shifted from a mechanical load to an electrical load on the alternator and the larger the load on the alternator the more resistance it has to being turned. The savings is in the fact that the fan hardly runs at all if set up correctly. Like I've said in previous posts on this subject, mine probably runs less than 1% of the time I have the engine running. In winter virtually never and in the Summer when surfaces are 130f + it comes on when running less than 35 MPH. If you were top compare the mileage with it running against the mileage without it running, I honestly would say less than 1%.
Also if you are an off roader, you need to be able to totally shut it off if going through water, and the ability to also over ride the control to force it on is nice. Also, if converting to a high power fan like the one I have, I strongly recommend upgrading to a 130+ Amp 3G alternator to handle the start current.
A couple of pictures of mine: Before, After, the control (old picture, relocated with massive modifications this past Summer),Current control location under the cover with a tie wrap on it, Inside control panel (meter not part of it, it monitors the voltage at the main distribution post on the under hood fuse box, the same point the alternator monitors) and indicator lets me know when 12V is applied to the fan ( A good trouble shooting aid if the fan fails to come on :-B ), A Schematic of the control I used, There are minor wiring modifications depending on how and what you want to control with it.
Food for thought :blink:
Good luck,

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