Help us fix Foam Mattress Mountain!
December 31, 2016 10:32 AM
A little under five years ago, my partner and I bought a high-end foam mattress. It was great...until this year. Each side of the mattress now has a roughly body-shaped depression in it, with a ridge between the two. It's putting both our bodies out of whack. How do we fix this? A few more details inside.
We are both in the 180-200lb range.
The mattress is queen size, so we can only sleep in one direction on it. We've turned the mattress around (so our heads are where the feet were), but it's a pillowtop so we can't flip it over onto the other side. We've also swapped sides, which helped a bit for about two months.
My partner slept in the middle of the mattress while I was out of town for two weeks, and that temporarily reduced the ridge in the middle, but after I'd been home for a week we were back to our old issue.
Foam mattress guarantees don't generally kick in until the concavity reaches one inch. It's not that deep yet, but our backs are not going to survive another half inch.
Are foam mattresses just a bad idea for people of size? Should we put another pillowtop on top of the existing pillowtop? Have you successfully resolved this issue?
We are both in the 180-200lb range.
The mattress is queen size, so we can only sleep in one direction on it. We've turned the mattress around (so our heads are where the feet were), but it's a pillowtop so we can't flip it over onto the other side. We've also swapped sides, which helped a bit for about two months.
My partner slept in the middle of the mattress while I was out of town for two weeks, and that temporarily reduced the ridge in the middle, but after I'd been home for a week we were back to our old issue.
Foam mattress guarantees don't generally kick in until the concavity reaches one inch. It's not that deep yet, but our backs are not going to survive another half inch.
Are foam mattresses just a bad idea for people of size? Should we put another pillowtop on top of the existing pillowtop? Have you successfully resolved this issue?
Same thing happened with ours. Two permanent body-shaped depressions. We returned it and they gave us another (under a 10-year guarantee). Same thing happened again after a couple of years, so we gave up on the foam and went for a pocket spring mattress, which is much better so far.
posted by pipeski at 1:46 PM on December 31, 2016
posted by pipeski at 1:46 PM on December 31, 2016
A little left field, and certainly not guaranteed to work, but consider flipping the mattress and buying a topper for the bottom. You would basically be adding the pillow top that the bottom doesn't currently have. After six months or so lying on its top, the foam may even out and you can flip it again.
posted by cnc at 2:40 PM on December 31, 2016
posted by cnc at 2:40 PM on December 31, 2016
Not that I'm suggesting this, but considering the warranty restriction isn't really fit for purpose, some people might be tempted to put heavy weights onto the existing depressions until they reach 1 inch concavity and then return the mattress. It seems the warranty is very unfair if you're expected to hurt yourself to meet the requirements.
posted by hazyjane at 2:02 AM on January 1, 2017
posted by hazyjane at 2:02 AM on January 1, 2017
We wound up getting a Leesa. It's working out well so far!
posted by rednikki at 9:25 PM on January 30, 2017
posted by rednikki at 9:25 PM on January 30, 2017
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posted by Th!nk at 10:55 AM on December 31, 2016