The whole idea of fan clutches was to save horsepower, and on some rigs that translates into mileage stats. It follows fan laws in that the volume or cfm directly follows rpm, the static pressure varies as the square of the difference say between condition 1 and condition 2, but the power varies as the cube Of the difference. Quick example, say a fan is running 1000 cfm at 1500 rpm with a 1 hp motor. You increase the speed 66% or go up to 2500, you'll get about 700 extra cfm, but the power needed now goes up to 4.5 hp, or in the case of an electric motor 5 hp to run it safely with a 1.2 service factor. Added to that, when a fan is boosted by say a positive draw or in our case ram air on the freeway, the power needed goes through the roof because it's working harder because of grabbing more air. See how these clutches come into play? I suppose with a 150 or so horsepower, losing 5 or 10 doesn't seem like much, but it's there. Our issue is finding reliable clutches.
I'm sure one of the folks at IH only would set you up with a fixed bladed one. I have found the IH 5 bladed fixed fan a whole lot quieter than the standard 4 bladed one.