Sorry guys, but, the original DSS was built with one goal in mind. Ancillary benefits were realized by supporting that long leverage point without a doubt. However, it was still developed primarily as a response to the deflection that occurred with that design in less than perfect conditions. You want to ram hard snow banks the sector shaft is usually the last thing to break, taking out tie rods and bending control arms is much more common before the box fails. Oh it will fail eventually but they drive like crap on goat trails until the cross bracing tightens it up. The 1st and 2nd gens were terrible for the frame flex, always had to fix them and\or build braces to keep things connected. Been there, done that, got the t-shirt.
DOR is nothing but a cheap imitation addressing something that is not an issue, another placebo mod with limited benefit. Trying to use it as example for cause is laughable.
I ran the brace for over 100k and still ate the bearings and the rack up in about 180k on the stock box, got 2 adjustments out of it and it was there FOR the sector shaft support as I could never find any frame flex to worry about. Even with the box and steering worn the difference of the support on or off was not worth mentioning. The 2nd gen flex was obvious where the 3rd gen is solid. Definitely not going to hurt to run one but they block access from the bottom pretty badly. Has to be dropped to do much of anything above it easily.
Direct quote from SSI web site:
The DSS, also known as the "Darin's Steering Stabilizer" is designed to eliminate steering wander in the Dodge Ram pickups. It does this by adding an additional bearing to the bottom of the steering box sector shaft and by adding an additional cross member tying the frame rails together eliminating frame flex. In other words, takes the slop out of your steering.