I tried many free/open source systems out, rolled out one and a half and finally ditched them all for RT (Request Tracker from Best Practical: http://www.bestpractical.com). It has a steeper learning curve than most of the others, and it really helps to know Perl, but the end result has been better than I hoped for.
Once it's installed, you can be up and running in minutes. Installing it, though, is a bit of an exercise in frustration (or it was; I'm several revisions behind). Most if not all of that frustration is in installing supporting Perl modules, though, not RT itself.
RT is highly customizable, if you want it to be, which is why it would be good to know Perl. There is also a very good O'Reilly book on it. And finally, the RT community has always been very supportive.
We have a team of 6 monitoring tickets in 13 queues, 14k tickets in a couple of years, all running on a 4-year old Linux desktop. It's pretty sweet!