"I challenge any one to build a 7-8klb truck with front leaves that will match the performance of my coil sprung Dodge. "
Done deal. I'll put my old Chevy with the simple aftermarket Softride suspension I described up on that challenge any day. I agree that factory front leaf springs are negatively arched and suck, though. Not enough travel to soak up bumps. The 1-ton chevys like mine also came with longer rear leaf springs than a 1/2 or 3/4 ton. That helps, too. My longer wheel base is also an advantage over your Dodge. It's a 4-door crew cab with 8' bed which is inherently smoother riding.
"Don't front leaf springs make your turning radius roughly equal to that of a Nimitz-class aircraft carrier?"
I don't know where that reasoning comes from. Do you believe the tire hits the leaf spring if you turn tight or that a coil spring Dana 60 has a tighter turn than a leaf spring Dana 60? Simply not true. Now if you said "longer wheel base" instead of "leaf springs", you'd have a slightly better argument. But that affects both coil and leafspring trucks the same way.
"Maybe your coil springs need to be replaced or re-arced. "
My Dodge coils don't need re-arched. They do not even have the leveling kit spacers so many guys install and they hold my front end up perfectly level when empty and do not rub my oversize tires or flares even with the weight of a Boss V plow hanging out over the front. They are stock and stiff and ride stiff, though not as stiff as the rear.
Every now and then, and more frequently now that diesel is 75 cents per gallon more than gas, I get in my big Softride leafspring Chevy and marvel at how much better it rides and steers. The difference is very significant, but I don't notice until I drive the Chevy right after driving the Dodge since I spend 12 to 14 hours per day driving a semi and even the Dodge feels like silk in comparison to that.
I've always believed if I had the Cummins and NV5600 in that Chevy, I would throw rocks at my Dodge with the 35" BFG Mud Terrains that fit beautifully in those huge wheelwells with only 2 1/2 inches of lift. The taller 1-ton frame is like a body lift over the 1/2 and 3/4 ton Chevys. (Did I mention how easy and inexpensive it is to lift a leaf spring truck compared a coil spring truck?)
"I should also add the steering gear boxes did not hold up very well on the GMs either"
The only "steering box problem" my Chevy ever had was a leaky seal after 170K miles. Cost me $5 for a seal kit. And it is, I believe, the same saginaw box my Dodge uses. You may be thinking of the propensity of Chevy frames to crack behind the steering box. That is true on some 1/2 and 3/4 ton frames, but I've never had a crack in a 1-ton frame. Even if it did, a $20 reinforcement plate is pretty easy to weld on and cure that.
"I don't agree with the weak coil springs part. "
Neither do I. Coils can be as stiff as any leaf spring. My coils are stiffer. It is all the other moving parts that are necessary for coils to function that make the Dodge Dana 60 and it's steering components so weak. Name ONE single thing that is stronger in the Dodge frontend than in a K30. Or more reliable.
Ball joints vs. kingpins? CAD vs. lockouts? Trackbar vs. no track bar at all? Twice the number of moving joints on the tierods? Unitized, unserviceable wheel bearings and hubs vs. tapered roller bearings? 30 spline inner axles (in 4pieces counting the weak sleeve) vs. two 35 spline solid shafts? Control arms vs. no need for them?
Simple is simply better. Even when Dodge did have a true dana 60 under the front of the 1st gens, it was considered somewhat weaker than the Chevy's, which had stouter axle shafts and better hubs.
"I enjoy the leather interior and all the other niceties we have these days in our trucks"
So do I, to a certain point. I want my truck to feel like a truck, not a car, though and DC has great difficulty with wiring the basics (like headlights), much less all the other electrical toys. I bought that old Chevy from a Texas rancher. A one-way plane ticket for zero-rust is cheaper than any rust repair. I was stunned when I got there and found the interior to be all custom oak (dash, door panel trim, overhead console, etc. ) and 4 thick, soft, cowhide leather bucket seats and matching fold-down console/jump seats in the middle. Very nice! Much nicer than my Dodge. He never mentioned it on the phone or in his ad. I call it my "cowboy Cadillac".
"Why not look into a suspension upgrade from Carli or Kore?"
I rest my case about the need to constantly and repeatedly throw big money and parts at the Dodge front suspension.
"my lifted CJ7 feels smoother than either of them"
Thank you. A CJ7 has LEAF springs...
All in all, imo, nobody has made a convincing defense of the crappy Dodge front suspension and steering here. Just do a search on "death wobble" to refresh your memories on how bad it is...
Only one old chevy I ever had ever did that. That turned out to be the egg-shaped wheel I had just installed unknowingly.