Fwiw, I checked real quick earlier and my front shaft has an 18 degree angle (single 1410 joint at each end). I was in a hurry so I couldn't check the yokes themselves but the tcase is rotated up 2" and no shims on the 60. Works fine, no binding.
dammit

What's a 1330 joint? All I've heard people talk about is 1310, 1350 and 1410, and R(whatever) factory CV.
1330 has the same width (3 5/8") as the 1350 but the caps are the smaller 1310 diameter.
4wheelinfury, your drivetrain down angle should be 4-5 degrees, you could probably look at raising the T-case up to sacrifice some rear shaft angle and help out the front shaft. Typically a modified 1350cv in the rear will take care of all your problems so pushing the case up may help quite a bit. And like someone else said, check castor angle, you may be able to shim the pinion up a little and still have it drive nice and cut some driveshaft cost.
I do have to say this too, for most trail rigs reliability is #1 on the build priority list so good driveshafts make sense. To the point that if you can't afford the super special part, limit the suspension or ground clearance to make it reliable. You'll go way farther with a drivetrain you can trust than with a suspension that breaks the drivetrain. If you're playing fast where suspension is more important, you'll have to figure out how to make it reliable and stretchy. This is another hidden cost of leaf springs, with a link system the driveshaft doesn't plunge much at all so you may need some high angularity from the joints but the slip is always plain stuff. Not that links are the answer all the time but they make driveshafts easy.