You guys are overlooking the Number 1 reason to do this conversion: RELIABILITY.
The Dodge pseudo-Dana 60 is a very weak, poor design. Period. Maybe suitable for 1/2 ton applications, but definitely NOT for a heavy-duty truck with a very heavy diesel motor over the front axle and possibly a snow plow or winch too, like mine.
The day will come when your CAD fails you; and only when you really need it. The day will come when the unitized bearing/hub fails you; in the worst possible circumstance. They will cost you dearly to repair. Oops, I forgot; you CAN'T repair the unitized hub... You can't even do preventive servicing! Pure light-duty disposable junk...
True, even after doing all of this: spending thousands of dollars on the hub kit, t-style steering components, ball joints, DSS, 3rd gen track bar, adjustable control arms, etc. , etc... .
You will STILL have a weak housing, weak ball joints (compared to kingpins), and Dana 44 sized inner axle shafts.
Definitely NOT the stuff that made the Dana 60 front axle famous.
But short of fitting a real Dana 60 Ford front axle in your truck, it is the best that can be done with the sow's ear Dodge sold us.
I plow snow and go offroad with my truck, and as you can tell, I am thoroughly digusted with Dodge for this joke of a front axle and steering and suspension...
A HD Dana 44 would be just as strong; maybe more so. Leaf springs would be infinitely better. That said, any solid axle front end is ten times better than the independent torsion bar crap Chevy betrayed us Bowtie fans for...
Until a Ford D60 conversion exists for the Dodge like are common for the Chevys, this type of hub and shaft kit is the best thing going.
I, however, would buy the EMS hub kit because the Dynatrac is way too pricey, but I would also buy the Dynatrac inner axle kit (IF they truly have their sealing problem fixed). The Dynatrac inner axles are true 1. 5 inch dana 60 sized shafts. the EMS axles are tapered back down to weanie Dana 44 size (one and a quarter inch, I believe). Don't let the beefy end fool you, they are only as strong as the weakest, smallest section.
My Dodge has destroyed over $2500 worth of tires in just three years!! Less time than that, actually, but I have to live with trashed tires until I can afford more.
My trusty K30 real Dana 60 leafspring Chevy has NEVER worn any tire badly. This conversion, along with all the pricey upgrades REQUIRED to avoid the dreaded and dangerous Dodge Death Wobble will pay for themselves in just a couple of years in tire costs alone!