I am wondering if you speak from personal experience?????

I don't see free spin hubs in your signature. Are you a driveline engineer???
I have had free spin hubs on my truck for 4 years and yes I use 2wd LOW to back my trailer and pull it forward if needed. Never had ANY issues and I am at 395hp at the crankshaft. I have the stock one piece driveshaft.
It seems to me he has some driveline build quality issues.
Ok, now that I am off of the night shift and not as touchy as I was Friday evening I'll try this again.
No, I am not a "driveline engineer" nor do I have "Freespin hubs" in my signature.
However I do possess a good healthy batch of "Common Sense" and that very sense tells me that he is overloading his driveline somehow, the first driveline could have been defective but the second "stock" driveline was most likely fine. It did not break the weld, it "twisted".
My solution offered was to start locking the hubs in before attempting whatever maneuver is turning his driveline into a pretzel. That seems pretty simple to me and feel that it is a very easy fix before he drains his savings account wondering why he can't keep a driveline in the truck.
If you do need my qualifications before I can make a statement then here is a rough overview.
Born and raised around diesel powered equipment. Also operated and repaired such equipment from Scouts right up to a Link Belt Cable Shovel. I know a thing or two about strain and what happens when components are pushed beyond the limit. So I guess I learned by doing rather than going to engineering school.
I doubt that you have ever had to take a loaded 10-wheeler dump through mud and rocks up to the fuel tanks and not break anything, or had said truck lose the throttle action as a result of the engine and frame twisting so far that the linkage could not keep up... ... or in reverse have the main transmission lever hit your leg so hard that you see stars. And still not break anything.
When you graduate from dump truck school you get the crappiest, most underpowered 18-wheeler that the company owns and haul the same load though the mud and up the hills as the shiny new trucks. You learn right off quick how not to break anything as changing a rear end or driveline in the woods loaded is not a good time.
So with that being said a twisted driveline indicates to me that it was over stressed either by operator error or the hill is simply too steep for one driving axle to cope with in 4LO without the hubs locked in.
So yes, I feel that I am qualified to make that statement and to recommend that he lock his hubs in.
I don't care if some of you have been to the moon and back in 2WD 4LO, in the OP's case it is not working out for him.
If he does as I have suggested he will not have any more trouble.
Mike.
