We carried one for years but never needed it. However, while your question is focused on the tool I would encourage you to consider the function.
What does a hi-lift do?
- It lifts things up.
- It can pull things (albeit not super well).
Both of the above functions can also be served by, for example:
"It Lifts Things Up"
- A Hydraulic bottle jack
- A Scissor Lift Jack
- An Exhaust Jack
All three of the above options will do the same as a hi-lift, but they will do it more safely. The Exhaust Jack is actually a lot better on soft sand and mud. If you are on pavement or gravel roads most of the time, the other types of jack will do the same job for the occasional flat tire as the hi-lift, but they will do it more safely and will occupy less of your total payload.
"It can pull things"
- Your winch
- A second vehicle
- an aluminum come-along
- MaxTrax
You already have a winch, but they fail. If your winch fails, but you always travel with a second vehicle, then I would say you are in fairly good shape without a hi-lift for 99.9% of the conditions an Overlander would typically see. An aluminum come-along will be half the weight of a high-lift and actually serve the 'pulling' purpose a lot better. And MaxTrax can alleviate the need for pulling altogether as they can often allow a recovery under the vehicle's own power.
To the folks who are advocates of the Hi-Lift, I would suggest that they are advocates for the need that a Hi-Lift meets -- i.e. they have been in situations where they needed to lift things up and/or pull things, and they had a hi-lift which saved the day. And I would argue that the Hi-Lift represents an extremely valuable recovery tool. However as you have identified, it comes with a significant cost to both payload and storage. If you can easily store it, and you have the payload to manage it, then bring one. But if that isn't your situation I would look at the other options above that serve the same function without the same trade-offs.
What does a hi-lift do?
- It lifts things up.
- It can pull things (albeit not super well).
Both of the above functions can also be served by, for example:
"It Lifts Things Up"
- A Hydraulic bottle jack
- A Scissor Lift Jack
- An Exhaust Jack
All three of the above options will do the same as a hi-lift, but they will do it more safely. The Exhaust Jack is actually a lot better on soft sand and mud. If you are on pavement or gravel roads most of the time, the other types of jack will do the same job for the occasional flat tire as the hi-lift, but they will do it more safely and will occupy less of your total payload.
"It can pull things"
- Your winch
- A second vehicle
- an aluminum come-along
- MaxTrax
You already have a winch, but they fail. If your winch fails, but you always travel with a second vehicle, then I would say you are in fairly good shape without a hi-lift for 99.9% of the conditions an Overlander would typically see. An aluminum come-along will be half the weight of a high-lift and actually serve the 'pulling' purpose a lot better. And MaxTrax can alleviate the need for pulling altogether as they can often allow a recovery under the vehicle's own power.
To the folks who are advocates of the Hi-Lift, I would suggest that they are advocates for the need that a Hi-Lift meets -- i.e. they have been in situations where they needed to lift things up and/or pull things, and they had a hi-lift which saved the day. And I would argue that the Hi-Lift represents an extremely valuable recovery tool. However as you have identified, it comes with a significant cost to both payload and storage. If you can easily store it, and you have the payload to manage it, then bring one. But if that isn't your situation I would look at the other options above that serve the same function without the same trade-offs.