Good to hear about the lift, but once you scratch up some money you should really think about doing crossover and a shackle flip.
I agree that kingpins are a cause of death wobble. But here is my explanation of how crossover can cause death wobble. 1) All OEM crossover steering systems (Dodge & Ford) on anything from the 90's and newer use a panhard rod on the front axle, with or without leaf springs. With crossover your link is from your pitman to the passenger side knuckle. When your frame and body deflects to the passenger side (in comparison to your axle) it pushes on the drag link and steers your knuckles slightly to the right, when your frame and body deflects to the drivers side it pulls on the drag link and steers your knuckles slightly to the left. Depending on how tall your springs are, how mushy the bushings are and how fast you are going you can get a "death wobble" going where your cab and frame deflect right then it steers right, swinging your body and frame to the left, causing you to steer left, and vise versa as you go down the freeway wondering if you should have bought life insurance. If it is a mostly street rig a panhard rod is an economical way to make sure this never happens, as it keeps the body and frame from deflecting in relation to the axle. The other way to go about it is hydraulic assist. The neat thing about hydraulic assist is that you have "super" power steering, and when you don't give the steering wheel input to the left or right the hydraulic system to the cylinder on the tie rod is closed, locking the steering down.
IMHO if you go crossover on a big lift you should run a panhard rod or hydraulic assist.