Hey Ry'... yes I do indeed have a 19 footer, 2700 lbs dry.
It's a 2007 Roadrunner 180 by Sun Valley. I wouldn't hesitate to recommend it, and I'm sure you can find them used, unfortunately Sun Valley went out of business last year. My only complaint about it is that I wish it had bigger windows, but we love the rear-door layout (bed is in the front).
It was marketed as a Lightweight model, and you can see where they accomplished this in a few places - the big one being it is 7.5' wide instead of the usual 8'. Also it comes with only 1, 20lb propane tank instead of 2. I compromised and swapped in a 30lb tank.
We paid around $15,000 in 2008, new but "last year's model" at the time.
I'd estimate 3500 lbs loaded, and I try not to travel with water/waste on board if possible.
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Good advice from others here, but I'll add my two cents:
I woud definitely NOT want anything bigger unless I was rockin' a CRD. Stopping has never been an issue (trailer has brakes, obviously) but on steeper uphill grades it struggles.
In about 5000 miles of towing I've had the trans temp light come on twice. I will be looking into additional cooling capacity for the transmission this summer. Coolant temperatures have never been an issue.
I can't recall the frontal area limits for the KJ either, but I know mine is within spec there.
As Brucebotti said, a trailer of this type and size IS a handful without sway control - in fact it can be down-right scary. Just pulling it home from the dealer for about 50 miles, I had some moderate crosswinds, and even passing trucks, which were really throwing things around.
Definitely invest in a weight-distribution / sway control setup. Best money I ever spent on the Jeep
I have a Reese WD/ Dual Cam Sway Control setup, and it is makes night-and-day difference. I've been through some nasty winds without incident and you barely notice passing trucks anymore. It feels like it ties the Jeep and the trailer together into one integrated unit so if there is any sideways force they move together, instead of the "tail wagging the dog" so to speak. Makes for a much more relaxing drive, I can't imagine doing a long trip without it, you'd die of stress by the end
We love it, it is our "hotel room on wheels", and also occasionally a spare bedroom at home!
Let me know if you have any questions!
Dave