It seems there are two camps of towing. Those that want the biggest vehicle to tow load possible. These people seem to recommend 3/4 ton trucks for a 22 or a 25. Some prefer a 1 ton for 25 and up.
The other camp is trying for ride, economy, general usage, or just looking to use what they already have.
The Big Tow Vehicle crowd often points to the greater safety margin and durability of the bigger tow vehicle. The Smaller Vehicle crowd often point out the practically of something like a Toyota Highlander (5000lbs rated) for a tow vehicle. Facts start getting stated that may not be real facts such as it will blow up or the transmission will fail within 5,000 miles of towing or the brakes will not stop the load. All of these fears have some basis in truth. For instance without a transmission cooler you may well burn the transmission out, a vehicle with adequate but marginal braking on the flats will be heading for trouble coming down a 10,000 ft mountain range and climbing that mountain range in 2nd gear at 5000rpm or worse lugging it up will take a real toll on running components.
Right now I fall in the lower end of the small tow vehicle using a 2004 Toyota Sienna (3500lbs tow rated) to tow my 22 Angler. I keep it light and only tow on the flat around Monterey Bay. It does fine and FWD pulls the ramps better than rwd only pickups. Braking on the flat is no problem. Emergency braking results in the anti-lock on the Sienna pulsating with the trailer wheels locking. From 45 mph it does not feel unsafe. Have not tried it from 55mph (my limit). Will it blow up soon? I don't think so but I don't know.
Tortuga towed his 22 with an even lower powered, older Sienna and towed from Southern Cal to the PNW and up to Tahoe with his Sienna winding up with 160,000 miles before upgrading to a Highlander.
The Sienna is both limited and on the boarder line for towing a 22, I think the Highlander would be fine as long as I was not running back and forth over the Sierras and Rockies regularly. But I keep Sea Cruz light e.g. under 3500lbs.
When my Sienna either blows up or wears out I may well buy a 1/2 or 3/4 ton truck simply because at that point it may fit my life style better and I would then not have to think about "is it big enough." I guess bigger is better on some level but with good discrimination smaller can work, at least if one is not exceeding mfg. tow rating.
Just my 2 cents.
Ron
The other camp is trying for ride, economy, general usage, or just looking to use what they already have.
The Big Tow Vehicle crowd often points to the greater safety margin and durability of the bigger tow vehicle. The Smaller Vehicle crowd often point out the practically of something like a Toyota Highlander (5000lbs rated) for a tow vehicle. Facts start getting stated that may not be real facts such as it will blow up or the transmission will fail within 5,000 miles of towing or the brakes will not stop the load. All of these fears have some basis in truth. For instance without a transmission cooler you may well burn the transmission out, a vehicle with adequate but marginal braking on the flats will be heading for trouble coming down a 10,000 ft mountain range and climbing that mountain range in 2nd gear at 5000rpm or worse lugging it up will take a real toll on running components.
Right now I fall in the lower end of the small tow vehicle using a 2004 Toyota Sienna (3500lbs tow rated) to tow my 22 Angler. I keep it light and only tow on the flat around Monterey Bay. It does fine and FWD pulls the ramps better than rwd only pickups. Braking on the flat is no problem. Emergency braking results in the anti-lock on the Sienna pulsating with the trailer wheels locking. From 45 mph it does not feel unsafe. Have not tried it from 55mph (my limit). Will it blow up soon? I don't think so but I don't know.
Tortuga towed his 22 with an even lower powered, older Sienna and towed from Southern Cal to the PNW and up to Tahoe with his Sienna winding up with 160,000 miles before upgrading to a Highlander.
The Sienna is both limited and on the boarder line for towing a 22, I think the Highlander would be fine as long as I was not running back and forth over the Sierras and Rockies regularly. But I keep Sea Cruz light e.g. under 3500lbs.
When my Sienna either blows up or wears out I may well buy a 1/2 or 3/4 ton truck simply because at that point it may fit my life style better and I would then not have to think about "is it big enough." I guess bigger is better on some level but with good discrimination smaller can work, at least if one is not exceeding mfg. tow rating.
Just my 2 cents.
Ron