Steve,,Kudos go out to you by bringing this to the forefront,,Are you sure its the frame thats the problem though??,,I do realize that the factory did not intend for us to pound these suspensions with the torque we are but a true set of ladder bars may not have brought on this problem,,When a bar is installed to control the top hit only on a suspension something has to give,,True ladder bar suspensions like the bars down in the nose, to allow a better axis rotation, so the rear suspension plants the rear tires by driving the nose up and the rear down,,In actuality what your producing is half of a four link suspension and without the abitity to control the bottom suspension hit all your doing is allowing the suspension to put pressure on its next weakest link(i. e-the frame),,Remember the rear is driving the pinion down towards the ground and your bars only help to hold the rear in place,not stop the rotation,,By incorporating a mount from the left to right frames(tubular or box frame) and moving your bars inside on the full mount you could easily add a lower set of bars to strengthen the setup and even incorporate a driveshaft hoop into it,,Also remember longer is better with true ladder bars, where four links like the top bars shorter,,You want to transfer the torque further up the frame allowing the whole truck to enhance traction with the torque,,One last thing,with the leaf springs and spacer blocks it hard to make a consistent hook ,a set of one piece blocks will help and clamping of the rear leaves will also help at some tracks,,Let me know how you make out and if you want a chassis book to read buy the book "Doorslammers" by Dave Morgan its very helpful...