NO, the lift DOES alter his CV angles when the suspension is unloaded
I installed a Pro Comp lift on my friends 88 K2500 a few years ago, i would NEVER buy a pro-comp IFS lift again because of the exact thing this gentleman is describing happening to my buddys truck as well
If you look at your lower procomp drop frame, in the bottom of it is two (1 on each side) bumpstops for the suspension too stop against when it is unloaded, problem is the original bumpstops were on the upper a-arm, not the lower a arm, now thats not a problem in itself (although if you notice all the newer top shelf kit's are leaving the upper control arm and it's bumstops and etc... in their stock location and using an extended steering knuckle setup to avoid having this exact problem) but the way pro comp designed it, the arms and cv's can now travel WAY farther then they were designed to
And as you have found out the hard way- if you are applying any power and sometimes even just coasting when the suspension unloads-POP goes the joint
Bad design by pro comp (i don't like there multi peice drop frames either, they shift when off roaded, if you have the capability, make sure the kit is bolted tight and alignable then weld the lower frame together)
The limiting straps, if set up right, should solve your problem. Just error on the side of less travel when setting them up
Another problem with the pro comp lift of that era is the steering drop setup, if you have the little pc of metal that usings bushings from the bottom of the steering drop bracket to the truck front crossmember, they will bend and pop the bushing very easily, look into the triple idler arm setup that rancho makes as a very worthwhile and trouble free up grade
Good luck man and i wil give the pro comp kit this, it rides really well, especially in the rough stuff, you just need to upgrade it to handle it structurally
GIT' R' DUN' /forums/images/graemlins/thumb.gif