Of course, it's risky to contradict Crazy Dave because he is the Godfather of the H260. ,...IHMO etc...However, these are the numbers you need to consider. When I got my boat, I ran the vehicle and boat/trailer combination over a state certified scale. The weigh tickets say my 2003 H260 and trailer weighs 5,400 lbs including 20 gls water. This was when it was new and before I started adding lots of things to it (Probably 200-300 lbs). I'm getting very close to 6000 pounds. I also have a weigh ticket that says the factory set up the rig with a 600 lbs tongue weight. This is where it gets tricky. You have two weights to consider: (1) What the vehicle is certified to tow, and (2) The maximum allowable weight of the boat/trailer/vehile combination. The first is important because you need to have enough horsepower to get up those hills or keep from burning up up your transmission. The second is critical if you are to have enough breaking power to stop the rig. Here's how I put it all together:My tow vehicle weighs 5700lbs empty and is certified to tow 6500 lbs. According to Ford, the Gross Combined Vehicle Weight of my van must not exceed 12,000 lbs. Add two people and all the normal crap in the van and the boat we're getting so close to the max GCMV I don't want to think about it. If you've gone through the same thought process and still feel OK about it, great. But I'd at least run the whole thing over a certified scale and crunch the numbers before taking your trip. Should cost you about $10 to find out what your numbers are. It's cheap insurance.The fact that the trailer has breaks helps some, the Mfgr probably adds some pad to his numbers, and short wheel vehicles handle differently than longer ones. But since these are intangables, I prefer to focus on what I can measure. Sorry to be so long, but I've done some really dumb stuff in my day and survived only by pure luck. Today I'm much more cautious.