Thanks for the comments.
My intention is to improve off-road performance. We like to take family trips to National Parks and forest land. While there, I like to indulge in a trail ride or two if I can work it in. We haven't done much of this in this truck, but I'm getting prepared. In a long wheelbase truck with fairly stiff suspension, I would think it would be easy to get crossed-up with open differentials. From the effect in my CJ, adding a locker gives you more than going from 2wd to 4wd.
One of our more memorable trips was to the San Juan mountains in CO in a borrowed 1/2 ton Chevy. We eventually ran out of clearance. I want to repeat that trip and plan others that are similar. While I'd love to trailer our CJ out there, it may not be that practical. I think we can easily get farther in the Dodge than the Chevy due to the clearance. But, I don't want to be halfway up a mountain pass and run out of traction either. The Chevy had a traction device in the rear axle and we did some pretty steep grades in it.
As far as the performance on the road, I have found it is very dependent on driving style. Hard acceleration will lock the differential which leads to tire wear, chirping and excessive over/under steering. Backlash in the drivetrain can cause lots of bucking and hopping in tight corners. With the auto trans, there's no backlash, so there shouldn't be any bucking/hopping. 10 ply tires, trackbar and the extra wheelbase should minimize the over/understeer characteristics although they won't be gone. That just leaves the hard acceleration to avoid. Well that goes against fuel economy. I do see the ice/snow breakout would be easier, but with the weight of the frontend, I think this would be no difference between a locker and a limited slip.
I guess what I looking to figure out is whether the no-slip (Powertrax softer locking product) is much different than the Lock-Right (Powertrax original product) and worth holding out for. Thanks for the warning on the tooth wear. I'll have to think of a way to measure that before cinching the deal.
- Dave