Tempurpedic too warm? Also, a mattress protector question
Jul 11, 2011 1:23 PM
Joined: Mar 11, 2011
Points: 5
We've had our tempurpedic classic now for almost 3 months.  I've noticed that when I wake up the area underneath my back and buttocks is somewhat warm.  Not burning hot, but just warm.  I was wondering if there is any solution to this.

I'm thinking of ordering this mattress protector Protect-a-Bed Premium (to protect the mattress):

 

http://www.mattressfirm.com/Mattress-Protector-P7.aspx

 

I was wondering how it will affect the feel and warmth of my tempurpedic.  Will it make it warmer or less warm?

 

Thanks!

Re: Tempurpedic too warm? Also, a mattress protector question
Reply #9 Jul 15, 2011 4:37 PM
Joined: Jul 15, 2011
Points: 2
sleepswithcats wrote:

 

http://www.holylamborganics.com/mattress_tops.html#Anchor-HAPP-51226

 

It's the "Moisture barrier".  A "thin wool sheet" is an accurate description.  The pictures on the web site are accurate.  I have it under a 20 year old cheap mattress pad.


Have you looked into the St. Dormeir?

http://www.snuggledown.com/s/catalog/st_geneve/st_dormeir_wool_mattress_protectors/?ref_src=froogle

It is cheaper ($168 vs. $195).  

The St. Dormeir is a quilted mattress pad with cotton on top and has elastic sides to hold it to the mattress.  Not sure which one is better.  There is a thread on this somewhere on the forum.

This message was modified Jul 15, 2011 by DavidG
Try mattress pad with Outlast
Reply #10 Aug 10, 2011 11:19 PM
Joined: Aug 10, 2011
Points: 4
Hey

Try the cooling mattress pad by Gilligan & Ferneman, can be found at Amazon.com or http://www.coolingmattress.com 

It has outlast material in it that is temperature regulating, so when your body gets warm it will absorb some of that heat

and help you sleep cooler. Awesome, i cant live without it now!

 

S.

 

Re: Tempurpedic too warm? Also, a mattress protector question
Reply #11 Aug 20, 2011 7:00 PM
Sleep and rest!
Location: Fort Myers
Joined: Aug 20, 2011
Points: 14
If that mattress protector is made with materials such as carbon fibers that afford a high level of thermal conductivity, it would absorb more heat and allow less heat to enter the memory foam.

Heat transfer across materials of high thermal conductivity occurs at a faster rate than across materials of low thermal conductivity. Foam is a material that is not very thermally conductive 0.03W/(m·K). or less so it  or will not pull heat away from the body efficiently, as well as dissipate heat even less.

Unfortunately not many mattress protectors offer performance fabrics.

You can try.

What i would do is add 1" of 19 IFD latex between your body and the memory foam.