I bought a Rhapsody about a year ago and have noticed it has really got soft and I sink into the mattress to the point that my back is really sore in the morning. I've tried rotating the mattess and that helps, however its considerably softer that when I bought it. Spent the extra money to get the Rhapsody due to its firmness, so this is disappointing. Is there any sort of topper or modification that I can do to make things better? Doubt Tempur will consider this warranty from what I've been reading. Any help would be appreciated. |
Personally I think that if the pushback of all latex was too strong for you, or too harsh so to speak. Than its hard to imagine springs and latex being better. The pushback effect of latex has to do with its elasticity and resiliency. Steel is the most elastic material there is that is used in mattresses (chrome steel is more elastic, and amorphous metal, or 'liquid metal' is even more elastic), it is hard to imagine that springs and latex would work. Perhaps an incredibly high spring count pocket coil with thinner steel used, although with latex on top its hard to imagine it would still be an improvement. This is why I mention stuff like Vi-Spring or Lavital. The cushioning materials are made out of natural fillings like wool, horsehair, and cotton. They may not technically be softer than what you can make latex, but it is less elastic filling material, although still durable. The downside of beds like this is that they are expensive. Perhaps there is something to be said about them. I can personally say that it is a very small percentage of people that find latex on their own to be too harsh on the body. I have had a couple of customers over time buy a rubber mattress (natural rubber) and make the switch into a high quality memory foam bed and be happy after the exchange. I have had people do the opposite procedure for the same reasons and be happy as well. So its hard for me to discern what the real answer is. This forum tends to bring people that inherently have issues finding the correct sleep system, so people are more likely to complain or not have the success that most do with any of these higher quality mattresses. I can also expressly say that with one particular brand of mattress we carry they either use all natural rubber as the core of a bed, or a high quality (albeit firm) pocket spring as support system with natural rubber on top, either way the satisfaction rate is high, but after a few years of selling lots of these we have noticed that on average people are more likely to want to bring back the coil mattresses for ones without a steel spring system. And the number one reason was because of pressure points in hips or shoulders, this to me means that on average spring beds have even more pushback. Although as I mentioned alternatives that may get around these issues, I certainly do not want to paint all innerspring systems into a bad light. Here is what I do find frustrating: One person buys a bed and is unhappy with it, where it has worked for many others. And all they have to say is "it doesn't work" or "it's no good"...look I understand the frustration of spending good money and not having it pan out in a positive manner. So I can't honestly blame people for that type of reaction, but this forum is here to try and help people find what works for them. We are all at the end of the day beautiful unique snowflakes so to speak, as our mothers no doubt told us all. I think its fair to say that memory foam on average is a more cradling and perhaps more pressure relieving material than latex. But it is detrimental to other people potentially to dismiss it as completely non pressure relieving altogether when many people have actually found it to be precisely so. These are all different setups people are buying with a lot of differences in build, some big, some subtle. Softness and firmness alone are also subjective. What feels soft to one person (say a 200lb man) might feel very firm to another person (100lb woman). All I can objectively measure is elasticity (durability and flexibility and support) and hysteresis (energy absorption, and in some other manner of terms pressure relief). The two of these properties do not go hand in hand with each other, so inherently mattresses are a very polarizing type of purchase, what works for one does not always and definitely does not always work for another. For example...take memory foams in general, they are a heat sensitive material which some people absolutely love for the slow sinking in effect and unique comfort they provide. There are thousands of Tempur-Pedic owners that would have you think you would be insane to consider buying another mattress. There are also lots of people that bought a Tempur-Pedic and hated the slow sinking in feeling and found it 'unsupportive', if these people also had chemical sensitivities they might also tell you they think these mattresses should literally be outlawed and illegal to sell (I have been told so by some people). Latex has its own unique qualities, as do other mattress builds. I can only speak to a law of averages and objective information. I certainly try my best to be unbiased, but I also have my own personal views on what is comfortable and or important to me. |
But more than anything, since you too prefer to sink in more, I'd recommend keeping as little else as possible between the latex & springs, as well as between yourself & the latex. I got alot more conforming action once I removed the thick exterior encasement & thin but tight binding around latex itself, both of which restricted its ability to contour around me. Of course I don't think the latex will hold up for as long this way, being less protected & getting flexed more aggressively, but still worth it to me even if I have to replace it years sooner. I had become so sensitive to both pressure points, as well as even the slightest softening under my hips resulting in pain, that for something that actually works on both fronts I'm willing to accept that cost, within reason. Because a few hundred dollars is one thing, but a few thousand dollars- especially after only one year- is ridiculous. Hopefully the OP gets Tempur-Pedic to do something for him.
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Thanks Budgy and all, Ironically- it is high coil count pocketed coils I was looking at-- over 1200 coils for a king, pocket coil, high carbon steel, bi-level, honeycombed + 2" of 25ILD talalay latex directly on that and zipped up in a rather thin wool and cotton cover with flexible slat base. |
Unfortunately the specs don't tell me 'how' everything is held together. But I believe that is the European Sleep Works (or something along those lines, forgive me if I goof on their name) coil mattress? That might do the trick because of the finer guage of wire and the higher spring count. |
Hi, Dallasgirl ! If the push back feeling is the thing that latex bothers you, have you tried to put a 1" or 2" memory form on top of the latex? That will dampen the pushback(I call it bouncy) feeling. I have a 11" all latex bed, while I like the latex feeling, I also understand latex is a different feeling from regular inner spring mattress. I have a 1-2"memory form that I used on my old spring mattress, sometimes I put the memory form on top of my latex mattress to add some extra plush feeling (I like plush bed:-)), I found the memory form does change the feel of latex mattress, it feels less bouncy. |
Thanks Sara! And Budgy- yes, it's Berkeley Ergonomics- European Sleep Works- their Alpine Model 'C' firmness :) |
This message was modified Dec 23, 2011 by francis61
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Hi Francis,
You mean the coils will sag? Do you have a Berkeley Ergonomics mattress? If so, I am very curious of your experience! This message was modified Dec 23, 2011 by Dallasgirl
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Coils are durable...they do not sag....perhaps some really cheap continuous spring systems that are prone to having helical wires being bent from abuse can be sagged out over time....pocket coils do not have helical wires to bend out of place. The reason modern coil mattresses do not last is because of the cheap polyurethane foam used as upholstery, not the springs themselves failing...this is extremely rare. |
No I do not have said mattress. I had a Simmons (not pocketed coils) or maybe it was a Spring Air. Anyways, it was very firm with very little upholstery on top. I bought a talalay topper from foamorder.com and it slept great, for a few years. The matress had sagged, the box spring had not, it looked like the springs had just compressed. I only paid 500. or so for the set and now sleep on a Serta perfect sleeper. I like the Serta, has just the right amount of padding (it was the firmest on the floor), and the latex topper is nice. its the egg crate kind. Going on 3 years with this mattress setup |