Nice Ex!
Here's what your angle should look like with a straight draglink-
Just 2 cents here regarding angles and lengths of steering components, and what I know about it.
2 things are essential here:
The angle should be repeated from both mounting locations on your drag link and trac-bar. A link can be be an S shape but it still has two places where it mounts at each end, that is the angle you need to worry about.
Also, the
lengths of both your trac-bar and drag link should be as close as humanly possible, again measured from mount points only.
Picture the passenger side tire stuffing upwards, bringing the trac-bar with it, if your drag link is not the same length ,it will not
arc the same, and push on your tie rod, or pull it, essentially allowing your suspension travel to steer you.
If the two parts don`t travel as one, it binds it all up -that is bump-steer.
You can visualize the effect by drawing a line (axle) on a piece of paper and putting dots on it and above it to simulate your mount points. Hold one end of the pencil as if you have a protractor and mark the arc the end mounts would make under suspension compression. If the pencil is held in one spot (length) for both points it creates two exact same arcs, even though they may be mounted a few inches apart. Shorten one of your links by holding the pencil shorter, and you can see how the arcs are no longer similiar. That is no good.
-anyway, I tend to babble, sweet truck!
what is the backspacing on those rims again??