Hey MK216V, you should share with the group how you think my van felt driving... no one else has really chimed in yet on their vans to the extent that I think you could.
So I met up with Josh and Brian (drove my UJOR 6"/35s there, ARB front bumper w/ ComeUp winch, Bilstein 5100's, stock 13" '04 F350 4x4 front brakes), drove Josh's first (MG w/ coil springs front, 33s, stock front bumper w/o winch, Fox 2.0's, '13+ F350 14.3" front brakes). We drove on country roads, then a gravel road with quite a few potholes, then back on country roads to his house. Then I drove Brian's (UJOR w/ leaf springs front, 35s, Aluminess front bumper with (Warn? winch), Fox Factory 2.0's w/ remote reservoirs, UJOR RSC upgrade w/ 14.5" front brakes), same route. Then I drove Josh's again for a back-back-back test. The biggest thing I noticed was that Josh's felt smoother, lighter on its feet. The latter could be due to less unsprung weight (33s vs 35s, front coil springs which are much lighter than front leaf springs) and no heavy front bumper/winch. Tracked very straight on it's own, simple to drive. It just doesn't feel like a big van which what I appreciate most(not that Brian's does, it's just that Josh's feels less so). The suspension really swallowed up the potholes to where it didn't upset the van, or all of us inside. Brian's felt good too, but you could feel the chuckholes more, perhaps a bit more bounce/rebound after lots of potholes. Brian's was more work to track straight down the road--really had to manipulate the steering wheel continually to keep the van between the lines (**however, he was well aware of this as this had come about 3days after his Les Schwab alignment. So he went to MG's later and they re-torqued his track bar and it's remarkably improved he says). Brian's steering did feel a bit tighter and responsive though ('10 van w/ 50k vs Josh's '08 w/ 125k). I've noticed my '07 has a bit more steering wheel play before something occurs, but I think that's just because I'm used to very taut and precise German car steering, which is unfair to compare to a domestic truck. So maybe as the miles accumulate the steering gear just gets more play--makes sense if so.
Both rigs are very easy to drive, I love the V10 vs the diesel. You can actually have conversations in them! Much smoother off the line(although both had much more responsive throttle pedals. I forget which was more sensitive--Josh's maybe?).
Both brake extremely well and with confidence. I think this is due to not only larger rotors than mine, but also being gas engine and much better brake pedal feedback due to boosted assist.
I do appreciate how UJOR's leaf springs have components sitting up higher off the ground, vs the radius arms in MG's sitting a bit lower. However, there are aftermarket radius arms I'm looking into that should provide more clearance(I hope). And besides the feedback I mentioned above, the fact that 14.3" front brakes can come standard in the MG setup(if you get a '13+ front axle) is icing on the cake, vs UJOR requiring the $2900 RSC upgrade to get 14.5" front brakes. The architecture and componentry of MG's coil spring front is a bit newer technology than UJOR's leaf spring front, so perhaps that is part of the ride/feel too?
To recap, both MG and UJOR are incredible 4x4 kits. For the most precise comparison I think Josh's would need to have the same front bumper/winch, 35's, and Fox Factory reservoirs...then compare again.