Couple things said on here I want to address.
First off, being in the Phoenix/Mesa area, i feel your pain on the heat issue!!
If you are primarily trying to reduce engine bay temps while wheeling, the hood lift will work wonders, remember tho that you are blasting your windshield with HOT air and if you are cool and cozy inside with the A/C, this may cause issues. If your engine commonly runs 200* to 210*, normal range for the 4.0, then the hood lift should not cause you any issue on the hiway.
The 350 SBC mentioned earlier running 210-225*, this is norm for a SBC......225* is getting on the warmer side than they usually like, but still reasonable, 185 is too cold and you are losing performance. If it starts spiking up to 240 or more, then you have a problem. 225* could be too high or too low of water flow thru the system. Common mod in the SBC is to swap in a high flow short nose corvette water pump. This is usually not good on a stock motor and radiator as it puss the water thru the system too fast and does not properly cool. This will commonly make a stock SBC run at 225* to 235*. You should only go to a high flow waterpump system if you make the rest of the system able to handle it.
Water Wetter, Hy-per Lube Super Coolant, DEI's radiator Relief, 40 Below.....
All those coolant addatives work, they really do..BUT, they work for what they were intended for!!! They DO NOT work to cool an engine that is running hot due to PROBLEMS!! I spent quite a while as a Crew chief on various race vehicles from dirt track to NASCAR open wheel, to Speed Trucks. We relied on the coolant addatives to keep our engines down in the 210* range. The most common engine we had was a SBC pushing 700+Hp with lots of aluminum and lots of timing creating lots of heat when running on alcohol!! These were built engines that will run hotter because of the power being demanded out of them, not because the radiator is clogged and its not getting enough cooling. We used 40 Below and it kept engine temps manageble. Now, if your stock 185hp 4.0 is running at 250*, it is not because of the power you are demanding or the advanced timing for performance, it is because it has a problem that needs to be repaired and water wetter or 40 below is not the repair. It may mask for a short time, but does not fix it. So, the statement that water wetter does not work is a grossly misinformed statement. It just won't work for something it was not designed for.
All my rambling aside, I personally think the hood lift looks like redneck cooling and much prefer hood louvers or vents. If you are concerned with winter, make a cover for the inside that will let you block them in the winter.
For hood vents, you could also look for a set of vents from a 98 Grand Chero 5.9 Limited, I love the looks of mine and they work great.
Sorry for the long tiraid, just my .02