Back to the OP, when you say "street driven truck" I'm not sure what your concern is. If you have the truck in 2wd with the hubs unlocked it doesn't matter what differential you have in the front. The only time it will come into play is if you need to run the truck in 4wd on the road, such as in a snow storm. From my experience I prefer a completely open front diff when you simply want 4wd for slippery roads. My K5 had an Eaton limited slip in the front at one time and it always wanted to push real bad (keep going straight) when you turned on snowy roads.
In general the Trac-locks were one of mildest limited slips on the market, in regards to being able to transfer the least amount of power between the two tires. They were definitely designed for OEM rear axle applications to allow for some additional traction but limited impact on the handling of the vehicle. Don't get me wrong as they do help some in off-road conditions. In my experience of 25+years of off-roading and 12 years performing automotive testing, here is how I rank differentials on a 1 to 10 scale in true off road conditions. This is with 1 being the type with the least amount of power transfer (open diff) and 10 being the best (Detroit locker or spool).
1 = open diff
3 = Trac-lock, and most OEM limited slips
5 = Eaton limited slip (aftermarket version)
6 = TrueTrac
6 = Gov-loc (if not worn out...on my 2500HD with 130k miles if you put 1 tire on wet grass and the other on dry asphalt it will spin the tire that is on asphalt instantly when you floor it, main limitation is if you lift a tire before it it locked in you often can't get it to lock)
10 = Detroit locker or spool
Again, those rankings are simply for off-roading and not for overall strength, wear, road manners, etc....