@Geotrash was it you that mentioned in another thread towing should be done near/at peak TQ RPM? (I may be confusing you.) I was going to reply to that comment someone posted, but really wasn't sure and I chatted with my buddy about it. Again, if that wasn't you, I apologize.
No need to apologize. But yes, I have had conversations about that topic and I know others here have spoken about it too. I don't think I would have said "should" about towing near/at peak TQ/RPM, because there are many factors that play into it. I think it's safe to do so, such as when pulling up a long grade trying to keep up with traffic, but equally important to me are considerations for which path through the transmission is strongest (e.g. the 4th gear path is stronger than the 5th gear path, according to nick transmissions). And, while the LS engines seem quite happy winding out to higher RPMs all day long, I spend most of my time when towing well below the peak power band because I don't need the extra power unless I'm climbing a hill.
Today, we pulled our camper 7 hours home from West Virginia through the mountains of southern PA, Maryland and Virginia, with many 8-9% hill climbs. I spent most of my time in 4th at 2800 rpm, with occasional downshifts to 3rd and 3800-4000 RPMs when needed to keep up with traffic at 65 or so up the steeper grades. It seems perfectly happy there, staying nice and cool. On the outbound trip, we encountered one super steep hill on a 2-lane road where I had to downshift to 2nd to hold 35-40, but that's all.
Edit: I should add that by "nice and cool", what I mean is that my temp gauge stays in the center 99% of the time, except for 2 or 3 times climbing steep, very long (many miles long) grades when the gauge would briefly climb to the 3/4 mark before coming back down, even if I was still climbing. Yes, I know how this gauge is calibrated and that it's only a relative reference. Also, the transmission temp held 187-190 for most of the drive, but would hit 205 by the time I crested a long hill, then quickly cool down on the descent. The only exception was on that one climb where I had to hold 2nd for a couple of miles of steep climbing where the transmission hit 217º, briefly at the top. This, with an aftermarket Derale cooler mounted below the front bumper and behind the lower grille.