Well, I finally had a chance to get the Lazarsmith bars on last weekend. And I can safely say that for daily driving, the bad manners of a grabbier clutch are almost eliminated. I can still get a hop going if I'm lazy on the clutch and throttle, but it is nowhere near the magnitude of what it would be without the bars. The majority of the second gear starts are smooth and solid. I still get a little bucking in reverse, but I don't have the bars properly pre-loaded yet (more on that in a bit). But I can now drive around town without bucking from every stoplight. In fact, I can almost get by with driving it like a stocker. It really feels like a whole new truck.
Ride quality hasn't changed much. I think I feel a little more high frequency road vibration, since the rear axle is now securely fastened to the frame. Nothing bad though. Bumps in the road feel sharper. There isn't the secondary shudder anymore after the initial impact of the bump. Probably because the axle is only going up and down instead of flopping back and forth, too. Again, good stuff.
I sort of expected the above results, but a nice bonus is how much smoother shifting is now. Apparently, in normal driving that axle is moving around more than you'd think. The lunge that you'd get when letting off the throttle, clutching, and then getting back on the throttle is gone. The kicker is that I didn't think there was a "lunge" before. You know that feeling you get when you make the perfect shift? That's pretty common now, even if I'm lazy.
Also, without the bars there's a lunge when you let your foot off the throttle or disconnect the cruise. Again, I didn't realize how much until after the bars were on. I've had the feeling that the throttle hadn't fully returned to idle a couple of times now (it in fact has) because I didn't get the, well, lunge that I was accustomed to. Like I said, it feels like a whole new truck.
So far the change has been all positive. No trailers yet, though. I'll add more when I finally get a chance to pull something.
The Lazarsmith bars look super strong (I have the "Drag Bars"). The brackets are solid, and all the welds are nice and clean. They are powder coated, but it's not a great job. The bars were also dinged up a bit, like they rubbed together during shipment (but they were each heavily wrapped in bubble wrap - looks like pre-shipment damage). The rear mount to the nuts under the axle for the leaf spring u-bolts, and the front are bolted to the frame with five bolts each (drilling and tapping the frame is suggested). The front mounts make me nervous being bolted on like that, so I'll probably come up with a catch strap of sorts just in case.
The heim joints used for the bar ends are beefy and don't restrict axle articulation, but without grease zerks, I'm curious as to their longevity up here in snow/salt country. Along those lines, the bars have holes drilled into them to insert a rod (included) to give you some leverage to spin the bars for adjustment. I put these holes on the downhill side by the axle so the (hollow) bars could drain. Unfortunately, this also put the locking tab (like a jamb nut) down into the brackets at the axle, so it's now useless. This is why I haven't put any preload on the bars yet. I'll probably flip the bars around and fill 'em with foam to keep the water/salt out.
The only headache during install was that the length of the drag bars on my truck puts the driver's side front pivot bold right into the fuel tank. So a shorter bolt (or cut one down) needs to be used. The other headache came in shipping. A bracket was lost in shipment (loose in the box, box got a hole) and there was way too much drama that ensued in trying to get a replacement. In the end, he made everything right though.
So, as far as the Lazarsmith-brand bars, they work. Nothing bad, but nothing really outstanding either. As far as traction bars fixing wheel hop caused by a grabby clutch or whatever, they're definitely worth the price of admission!