i have a similar set up in mine, Eaton don't do one for mine so i have an Australian Torqueline Torquelock.
They are all based on the Torsen design, in one way or another. Gears rather than friction to bias torque. The gearing and dimensions used inside dictate how aggressive they are at torque biasing.
they never ever totally totally lock, they just act like they are until the demand to allow variance between sides returns.
you wouldn't even know it was there on the street
does the job at the track
the diff rebuild can be a little more complicated with one, but it is dependent on centre design and the diff gears you choose.
if you have say 2.9:1 or 3.23:1 3.5:1 gears, the head of the pinion is quite big.
if the truetrack centre is large around its middle, the head of the pinion rubs on the barrel section of the truetrack. so you need to machine some off the surface of the head of the pinion. in order to be able to correctly position it in the case for good patten on the ring gear.
that surface usually has the pinion/gear set ID and some info about pinion depth spacer thickness on it, a dimension or a + or - number to indicate variance one way or another from the standard spacer size. take a photo first
not something that overburdens a diff shop, but an extra step that involves going out to a machine shop or a friend with a lathe, if you are rebuilding at home.
if you are putting in 3.9:1 or 4.11:1 the risk of this is tiny, the gearset and pinion would have to have been made at the very end of some tolerance or other.
the longer the legs the gears have, the greater the risk, BUT it depends on the gear set. for the same gearing the pinion position in the case varies between each set of that ratio, which is why that setting depth info. is stamped on the crown. You won't know until you try...
but a really good upgrade
no messing with friction modifier
maintenance free
silent of the street
does the job
light up tyres when you want, not when mid corner cresting a small hump.
i.e i have not ended up facing the wrong way on a greasy road in the dark for a long time
one of the better upgrades i have done
Dave