First off, that's some fine MIG welding on those pipe joints and where you attached the brackets to the axle. I like it!!
Now, about the ride (my $. 02 you didn't ask for... )... ... to a point. NOT to be argumentative, but for informational sake, if you match your traction bars curvature to the spring arch travel, it will ride much better... . One way, keeping your stock springs(and ride), requires making a "slider" front bar. Where the two stablilizer arms come to the front mount, there is a longer tube inside a tube. This gives the springs a little more travel, but pretty much eliminates axle wrap. Maybe not the best for sled pulling, but certainly good all around. You have to be able to match the spring arch and rearward travel during compression when the rear shackle allows the springs to move rearward ever so much... ... I've never done it on a diesel, but on a street car, it's a good sleeper trick.

Otherwise, without the slider, you have to flatten out the front arch in the springs and add a half-leaf or two to prevent flex, maybe remove the axle lift block, to match the radial travel of bars. The half-leaves will do wonders without traction bars, itself.
As for the engine mounts, I'd be leery of a chain type mount. I'd think it'd snap and vibrate a lot and jerk on the engine block when jumping through gears. I've always use 3/8" aluminum or 1/4" steel plate bolted from the block to the frame/unibody on cars. Again, I've never done that on a diesel in a truck... . Once in a Jeep with a 4BT. It vibrated like a blender full of bolts!!!!

..... owner didn't like, neither did I, so we pulled it and made some custom mounts like a semi-truck, with the steel brackets sitting on top of the frame with Energy Suspension bushings between..... Conveniently, Cummins makes large, threaded holes near the front of the block, just for people like us.
FWIW, I had a PowerWagon with the PTO winch run off the transmission... ... I had a short 5/16" chain wrapped around the motor mount and welded after winching a cattle-trailer back up that got turned over in a tornado. Every time I changed gears or started uphill, it reminded me that I didn't have much of a motor mount on the driver side... . :-laf
Are those tractor links American made? I've used those quite a bit on front axles, making adjustable four-link bars..... The Chinese ones don't handle stress too well. You're keeping your leaf springs under there, so it's not a big deal, but I've broken several dozen of the chinky ones... ... The good American made ones don't wear as fast and I don't think I've broken one yet.....
Some of the good American made ones:
http://www.emfrodends.com/
http://www.aircraftspruce.com/catalog/appages/hmxbrng.php (oober expensive!!)
http://www.polyperformance.com/shop/Suspension-Joints-Rod-Ends-p-1-c-726.html (these guys have chromoly tubing, too)
... ..... and so ends my spilling of a plethora of pointless knowledge... .
