As you can see by my sig pic, I have that exact trailer. I verified the tongue weight at the dealer with a Sherline before purchase and also brought several water jugs for the rear to check reduction of tongue weight the day we picked it up. I routinely add most of my travel goodies to the rear compartment, as it is huge. Two boxes of fire wood, three bikes, cases of drinks, clothes, misc tools, camping chairs, all of it. I have tested my tongue weight with a hydraulic scale I made, which is tested and calibrated to be every bit as accurate as a Sherline, and what I have found is that you can take a 1250 lb tongue down to 1050 by loading the rear compartment. It should be noted, however, that it is not a linear equation. IOW, the more you add to the rear doesn't continue to reduce the tongue proportionally. There is a law of diminishing returns which kicks in at some point which I can't seem to explain. Possibly the suspension compressing accounts for a loss in reduction of tongue weight, don't know.
At any rate, I have weighed my setup several times in various loadings and normally tow for camping at 7800-8200 lbs., and tongue weights are between 1050-1200 lbs. I run a Reese Dual Cam 1200 lb system and it works pretty well. I can't imagine loading the trailer to it's maximum GVWR but it can be done, provided one has the tv to pull it. I do not currently, and haven't had the need to take that much stuff along. It's been a pretty good trailer and tow system for us. My tv is the weak link, mostly from a power standpoint. It handles the trailer fine, but needs more power at times.
"It`s not important that you know all the answers, it`s only important to know where to get all the answers" Arone Kleamyck
"...An unarmed man can only flee from evil, and evil is not overcome by fleeing from it." Col. Jeff Cooper
Sunset Creek 298 BH