Just purchased a King Koil - Cool Nights latex mattress and both my husband and I feel like it felt much less firm in the store. My gut was telling me not to make the purchase, but my husband was waking up in pain every morning. We were sleeping on a Simmons pillow top Back Supporter. We decided latex was the way to go. I thought we should go the DIY route or buy a more expensive "all latex" model....but here we are. I know the KK has a non latex foam core and lots of latex on top, we bought a higher end model that has more latex in it but still... Now I'm thinking I need to soften this KK up. Will a laytex topper help? Can someone recommed a topper model, latex or otherwise? I am so disappointed so far with this purchase. Thanks. |
cloud9, yeah I am usually not so curt and abrasive. But it struck me that the poster was being lazy - wanting advice yet not being willing to do anything about her situation. There is no point asking for advice or suggestions if one is not willing to try some more experiments... In any case I apologize to Michelle for my abrasiveness. I know it can be frustrating to not find a comfortable night's sleep no matter what you do, especially after spending that much money. Good luck! |
Michelle, What pillow are you sleeping on? When I made my bed too firm under my 1" topper (when I thought I would try a 44 ILD under my topper), my shoulders would ache in the morning. I also sleep on the side. The only combination that seems to be working for me is my right side of my bed that has the 1" soft latex topper over the two 37 ILD 3" natural latex cores over the 46 ILD blended Talalay Latex core over my slat bed. My left side of my bed is still slightly too firm since I put a 44 ILD in the middle and it feels the best when I go to sleep but I wake up with a little bit of shoulder pain. But the 36 ILD in the middle is too soft for me so I may call Dave at FloBeds one more time and explain to him that my car accident has made my back and neck so sensitive since I now have 5 herniated disks. I love my FloBed since it allowed me to make it just right before the car accident and to now change it to fit my new back after the car accident. it is just me on my bed, I am very comfortable most nights sleeping on my right side but sometimes from all the stress in my life and that time in my life, I wake up sweaty and need to switch to the other side of the bed. I can live with the left side but prefer it to have two 37 ILD's and not one of them being a 36 ILD. Amazing that one ILD can affect me so greatly. I sleep on a natural latex pillow from overstock in a standard size. The Pillows FloBed sent me over had a better feel but were Queen size so too thick for me. Dave tried to cut one skinnier for me but it turned out too skinny and I now appreciate the original Overstock Latex pillows I bought and feel that are supportive but soft enough for my petite size and I sleep well on them without allergies. I feel for you since it is awful not getting a good night's sleep. I would try a new pillow as well as maybe cutting thicker softer latex foam for your shoulder area. I have made expensive mistakes in my life also that I wish I could redo but I can't. I know my previous way too hard bed was a very expensive mistake that I lived with for I think about 12 years. I did not wake up with back pain but I kept moving all night from side to side to get off of the pressure points and was wishing I kept my twin size perfectly comfortable bed and not bought that awful Posteupedic with no cushion at all Queen Size bed. I am now sleeping on a Queen Size FloBed with split sides to allow me to make each size comfortable for myself with many combinations. I was hoping to have a partner for the other side but since I am still alone, I am making both sides just right for me. |
Michelle; It's been awhile since you bought your bed...have you tried switching sides with your husband? Our bed was firmer than I liked at first, so I switched with my husband and his side was softer because he had more body weight than I did. I made him sleep on my side for a week. Then my side was better! Have had the bed two and a half months and now it is sleeping quite nicely. Kait |
Michelle, I've been through so many years of pain, simply trying to get a decent night's rest, I could easily write a book on the subject. Please pardon the length of this post, but here are a few of the conclusions I've reached: Rule #1: Don't rely on -- or even listen to -- ANYONE'S advice. Asking which mattress or topper is right for you is like asking what pair of shoes will be most comfortable for your feet. So many variables are involved (your body proportions, sleep positions, the pillows you use, your mattress foundation etc etc etc), all you're going to get from other people are endless anecdotes, one subjective opinion after another. Each opinion will make you more and more confused, and each opinion is relevant only to the person who's giving it. The bottom line is, in today's mattress market, which is built around inferior materials and a throwaway mentality, you must invest the time it takes to find the right mattress. That means spending at least an hour on each mattress model you're interested in. Be sure to bring/use your own pillow(s) from home. But even that is no guarantee of long-term comfort, as explained below. For nearly a century, buying a bed was easy. You'd walk into a store and have a grand total of *three* mattresses to choose from: firm, medium and soft. And it really didn't matter which model you chose, because all three mattresses were made from quality materials that were built to last. However, in the 1980's bed manufacturers discovered consumers could be forced to buy a new bed every few years, instead of every 10, 20 or even 30 years. They began using cheap foams instead of wool and cotton batting, untempered springs instead of tempered, etc. And millions of people have been struggling and suffering ever since. Rule #2: Stick with traditional technology. That means the less memory foam and polyurethane foam, the better. Look at any high-end bed manufacturer (Hästens, Hypnos, VI-Spring etc) and you'll find none of them use petrochemical foams in their mattresses. Even so-called "100% natural" latex is mostly (60%) petrochemical foam. If you do find a mattress that still uses all natural padding and comfort layers, and no foam, you'll have to spend several thousand dollars for one. But over time, these mattresses aren't really more expensive, because they last 20 or more years, while foams begin to compress and collapse immediately after you start sleeping on them. Rule #3: Buy a real box spring (preferably one that's 8-way hand tied), *not* a solid foundation. This is especially important if you're a side sleeper: no mattress by itself is able to provide adequate, long-term hip support while providing enough give for your shoulders. Quality box springs are the primary reason why traditional "firm" mattresses sets are so comfortable, while today's "firm" mattress sets are like sleeping on concrete slabs. If you're like most people, you don't have 7 or 8 grand (or more) to spend on a bed. If you must use foam, fortunately a few manufacturers are beginning to sell a workable alternative: mattresses with zippered covers that allow access to (and adjustment/periodic replacement of) both the spring coil unit and foam padding. An example is www.baybed.com, however I have no first-hand experience with this particular company or their products. |
Very interesting posting JimBC. I agree. I would like to read your book and learn more. No kidding. I have to ask you what bed do you have now? If you had to use a topper what would you use? I think I know the answer already, none! I have tired everything too. I have an old Spring Air bed mattress that you can flip. Unfortunately it is hard, it has a box springs too. So if you can't afford a $7,000 bed and you have no option but to try to put a topper on it, what can you possibly use???? I have tried them all, memory foam, polyester batting topper, PU foam, latex. I guess I have to try some horse hair!!! Maybe some hay, LOL.<BR><BR><BR> This message was modified Feb 3, 2009 by Leo3
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Leo, as I tried to explain, it's impossible to give a useful recommendation without knowing your body proportions, what positions you sleep in, etc. If your mattress is sagging, or has permanent indentations and compressed areas in its comfort layers, a topper isn't going to help. In fact most toppers will make the problem worse. Do you sleep any better when you lay in the exact center of the mattress (directly over the center support(s) of your box spring)? If so, your problem is likely a sagging mattress, not an overly hard one. I should also note that Spring Air box springs are junk. Just for a test, try putting the mattress directly on your bedroom floor and see if your sleep quality improves. If a mattress is even, but just too firm, some people have had luck with a 3" topper (featherbed, convoluted memory or PU foam). But these toppers may cause back or hip pain if you're a side-sleeper, or if you weigh more than average. Currently I'm sleeping on a McRoskey mattress, "gentle" model. It's comfortable, but at this point I can't recommend it. After just three months some of the mattress tufts have begun to tear through the ticking, even though I'm far from overweight (5' 10", 150#) and have flipped and rotated it right on schedule. McRoskey said they would cover it under their warranty, but frankly I see no reason why I'm not going to have the same problem with the replacement mattress. This message was modified Feb 3, 2009 by JimBC
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I am 5' 10' &155 lbs. or 160 give or take a few pounds; side sleeper, and I don't see any indentations on the mattress. This mattress is about 12 years old, and has wool on one side and silk on the other. It sleeps the same it did at the beginning, hard. Yes, the inners are probably compressed. How are the box springs on this mattress? I have tried to research to see any info, no luck. I have tried a good feather topper and that helped with the shoulders, but the hip still hurts; and that was over foam and latex. What have you tried? Maybe I can learn from your mistakes; I am not sure what I have learned from my mistakes yet. I have been through so many mattresses, like lots of people here. It is amazing and sickening how mattress makers have not been sued for putting junk out on the market. What do those manufacturers sleep on???? Do they sleep on their junk they make? I wish I could get a baybed, they are in CA, so that is out. Sorry about your McRoskey mattress, do they expect you to replace it every 3 months? Maybe consumers can learn how to make their own mattresses like they did back in the days they slept on hay, they probably slept better than we do now. This message was modified Feb 3, 2009 by Leo3
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Step one is to figure out if your hip pain is coming from the mattress or box spring. Put the mattress on the floor and see how (or if) the problem gets better or worse. |
To Leo: I agree with Jim. First you have to find out if your mattress is giving too much or too little. Spring Air has crappy springs...so if it is 12 years old it is just shot no doubt. I researched by finding what springs worked best for me and finding the best feel for my comfort(stayed at different hotels and took notes), and then took the leap to have a bed made. It started out firm, but has become like a comfortable pair of slippers. I have had low back pain for YEARS. I was very worried that it was going to become chronic insofar as I would not be able to fix it with a good mattress at some point, which made me decide to stop sleeping on a mattress that I could not make work and take the leap. My pain was caused by the lack of support in the various mattresses I owned(generally, too much padding going flat too soon and lousy springs). New mattress(with offset coils)new boxspring(with coils), made the old fashioned way(two layers of "insulators" to keep the padding from assimilating into the coils), and only a bit of foam on top is what finally worked. I have not woken up with a backache since I got this mattress. I have hip support. Yesterday I was working in the garden and spent too much time bending over...low back siezed up. Bad. I did the usual, ice, heat, laid on the firm couch...then went to bed. That is where my pain would have gotten worse before. This am I woke up, same position I was in when i laid down, and my back was 95 % perfect...just a teensy twinge to remind me not to do that so much. YAY!!!! Before I would have been on pain meds, laid out for at least two weeks and really pissed off at myself and my bed. Kait |
Okay I see no body impressions on the mattress. I I truly hope and believe a topper will fix this. If this mattress had tempered coils in box springs (I think it does) and a flipable mattress I believe (and hope) the springs are better (in the mattress) than anything I could buy today. I can not afford to buy another mattress, so I have to band-aid this one. Where there is a will there is a way. Of course I can't buy good topper cheap, so that is another problem. How do you find out the history of a 12 year old mattress from Spring Air? I tried to find out online, and no info. Spring Air is only promoting their one side mattresses of today. I thought they only started making one side mattresses about 5 years ago? Kait, I think your back problems are (of course) different from my hip problems. So I think the mattress problems are different, I don't know, what I don't know could fill a book! JimBC, I would like to hear your history of problems of mattresses. I could learn more... I am interested..... This message was modified Feb 4, 2009 by Leo3
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