How would this work? I really need something to get the latex I'm buying up several inches to look correct on our bed. I'm not crazy about the slatted foundations I see and they do seem expensive for what they are. I saw a nice bonell springed foundation at IKEA that would only be $200 for an eastern king size. What are the positives and negatives of putting 8" of latex on this type of foundation? Would it work? Would the springs damage the latex? Would it support it? I do see almost all of the S brands latex mattress come with what looks like to be a regular spring type foundation. Thoughts?
This message was modified Nov 15, 2008 by BillB
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Hey Bill, I took a look at your new bed. Very nice. Looks like it's got a built-in frame you drop your foundation on to. From the picture I couldn't tell if it it has a center rail with a foot in the middle. If not you will need to modify it. This message was modified Nov 16, 2008 by cloud9
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Can two people move this around to even take the cover on and off to wash the cover once in a great while without pulling a few muscles? I would prefer the split cores but Foambymail does not sell these for the larger mattress sizes but they do sell XL twins; but together they would be 78" wide instead of 76" and might look a little funny and also not fit into the mattress cover and sheets, etc. Also would one of these mattress store foundations be comparable to one of the slatted frame wood foundations as far as support and breathability? This is exactly what I have now in a 5" variety but it is going back to JCP with the bed very soon. So many questions.....
You are right, the bed does have a built in frame to drop the foundation into, it also has 3 slats accross the frame that screw into the sides (head, middle and foot area), and these each have two feet under the middle area. So it doesn't actually have a center rail but the support is there for anything I am seeing. I might try and get a few more slats to go under it. It looks safe enough to me to drop either a foundation into or one of the slatted wooden frames. |