in my experience the shock boots trap dirt and water and will rust your shock bodies about 10x's faster then normal.
truck looks great! Can you turn full lock without the caliper hitting the beam??
I know you likely can but in those pics it looks close!
Nice work!
Good question. Answer is no! The lip on the beam needs to be trimmed back so that the steering stop will hit. I can add longer stops if need be. It'll only help with the longgevety of the U-joints.

I've still got the alignment to do.
Here is some measurements to get some started should they do this. I'm sure most are asking what is base line info.
"My coils" (EB 5.5" coils with F150 upper buckets, 3" taller than an RBV, RBV coils would sit at 14") sit loaded at 17" with 1" spacer under them (Clearance for the axle beam). Drive side is sitting a tad high so I'm dropping that side spacer to 3/4"
Previously my track width was 60.25" and now it's 59.75" the wheels are 4" BS over the 3.75" before.
Pivots sit in the 4" lift hole. Passenger side F150 degree cam is 1° and the drivers side is a 1/2°.
Steering is the superrunner linkage with the outer TRE under the knuckle like found on an F150.
I'll get some more baseline info. I'm posting the Degree cam info. I asked about them from other members, I was looking at where to start from and they didn't know, what they used.
So now you have a baseline to go from. The original axle had 0° cams in both sides. I had cutoffs from a bent D44 TTB that I was able to get the cams from.