This is usually how it goes.....most of them are running very mild lift and 35s with some trimming. Not overly heavy vehicles either.
-when pushing the front tire into anything too hard, they will pop the joint at the knuckle often. Also happens when the front end is wedged. This is what they look like after that happens.....I probably have pictures of a dozen broken front ends floating around.
-If the tires are pointed straight ahead, on a big climb any medium size bounce seems to take out the inner shaft. I think it was the short side pretty repeatably. If somehow the shaft doesn't pop, it usually takes out the ring gear....and they are all running 'stronger' 4.10 gears pretty much.
The solution for one of them was to install a later iron high pinion 8 diff center from a late model 4-runner. Custom alloy inner axles shafts. It popped a lot of CVs till he finally swallowed having a custom set of RCV shafts made for it.....both CVs and the shafts.
My #LX45 isn't that much of a lightweight. It is still 4500-5000lbs depending on how it is loaded for the trip. It's probably lighter than a loaded 80 series sure, but that is being pushed around by a 5.3LS V8 engine and has 40s hanging off the axles. I do have 300m axles front and rear. This last year I was able to shear off a set of alloy drive flange studs on one front corner ( with 4340 RCV drive flanges ).
I don't think AWD would help, at least if you want to go places. My #LX45 runs an AWD t-case, I know immediately on anything even medium-hard if I forget to lock the center diff. Once the front tires start to unload it just spins one of them and you don't go anywhere. Having to drive around a front end that breaks all the time kinda sucks.
It doesn't seem to be very popular for the stuff I do. It might work fine for mild wheeling, but as soon as you need two lockers....they start to have a issues. If the type of wheeling you do only requires one locker sometimes....then it might be ok.