There are several good choices for Traction Bars, National Tire and Wheel (NTW) sells FabriTech traction bars that fit the Dodge Trucks. I used them on my Ford and they worked very well, sell for around 300 bucks. Fabtech has a traction bar for the 1500/2500 series Dodge, not sure about the price but it looks very nice. Pro Comp has Traction bars that alot of wheelers use, they are in the 250-400 dollar area and have been around for several years. Rancho also makes quality traction bars, but the last time I checked there site, they still Didi not offer a set for the Dodge trucks. I used there set for the Chevy trucks and then just fabbed out a rear mounting bracket. I had run their traction bars before on a Chevy I had and liked them very much. Their bars are very strong, they use 1-7/8" o. 188 DOM tubing, prob ally the strongest bar on the market? Like I said I used them four 3-4 years on a Chevy without incident. The reason I used them on the Chevy was the same reason I used them on my Dodge, spring wrap. The Chevy was lifted 6" and ran 35" tires, I use to pull a 32' Tag trailer with it that weighted around 9,000Lbs. Under certain conditions the springs would wrap up and make the rear end hop, the addition of the Rancho bars completely curred the condition. With the Dodge, I had the same problem. It is lifted and running larger tires, and the trailer I tow is a 36' Gooseneck that weights over 16,000Lbs. The bars also curred that problem, and I would recommend them hands down. Many on this site like to pick apart other peoples stuff, I ran into that when I posted about my Rancho Bars and how they had to be modified to fit the Dodge truck. First, I could care less if you like them or not, and second, They are not for racing and will never be for racing (pulling, if you can call that racing?) They are for the street, and for the real world conditions that I live in. They work just fine, look great and didn't come with the stamp of approval so many on this site seam to think they have to give. 90 % of people on this site are cool, enjoy sharing information with others and live in the real world like the rest of us do. The other 10% are fake, phony and always have to be-little others that don't buy the same parts or subscribe to the same philosophies as they do. I enjoy sharing information with other owners and sometimes helping people that have problems, they (the 90%) are what this site is about. Good luck with your traction bars, they do help control spring wrap, which occur es while backing a heavy load, or on wet or slippery conditions. One poster, recommended the 2WD low kit. It also works very well, I have the Bob V 2WD kit that does not use any electronics and actually does the job correctly. Some kits use a solenoid to block the vacuum line to the CAD 4WD actuator, this will allow you to use Low range with out the front axle being engaged. But it does not address the fact that the front axle has to be locked either IN or Out of engagement. When you use a solenoid to block the vacuum, it prevent the engagement, but allows the CAD to bounce around, back in forth, which can and will cause damage. The correct way to fool the CAD system into allowing for 2WD LOW, is to re-route the vacuum system, into holding the CAD engagement out of engagement when it is suppose to be held in engagement. This gives you the 2WD LOW that you need, put does it in a way that will not hurt anything in the front end. Good luck.