@Jeff - I am definitely not an expert on this, but I have had good results with instantiating a new context on every call. I think it's similar to creating a new Connection object on every call with ADO. The overhead isn't as bad as you would think, since connection pooling will still be used anyway.

I just use a global static helper like this:

    public static class AppData
    {
        /// <summary>
        /// Gets a new database context
        /// </summary>
        public static CoreDataContext DB
        {
            get
            {
                var dataContext = new CoreDataContext
                {
                    DeferredLoadingEnabled = true
                };
                return dataContext;
            }
        }
    }

and then I do something like this:

    var db = AppData.DB;
    
    var results = from p in db.Posts where p.ID = id select p;

And I would do the same thing for updates. Anyway, I don't have nearly as much traffic as you, but I was definitely getting some locking when I used a shared DataContext early on with just a handful of users. No guarantees, but it might be worth giving a try.