Memory foam mattress toppers

Anyone use one of the memory foam mattress toppers? Like? Dislike? Concerns? Durability?

What about sheets, adding a couple of inches would make a much tighter fit for sheets.

Nope. But if that memory foam would remember the shape of my wildest fantasies then I’m sure it would be worth every penny.

I have a two-inch thick magnetic mattress pad on our queen-size mattress. If I recall correctly about the construction of the mattress pad, the top inch is memory foam, and it rests on top of 500 high-strength magnets, with standard form for the bottom inch. I am a believer in the use of therapeutic magnets, as I have noticed a big difference in my sleep on the magnetic mattress pad. I was having a lot of pain in my hips and shoulders during the night prior to my purchase of the magnetic pad. I am happy to report that I rarely notice this pain anymore.

The only negative that I can say about the foam padding in the mattress pad is that it has tended to form a hump right in the middle of the mattress between where we lay. This is not really a problem, but I do notice it when I make the bed.

I shelled out 300 clams extra for a memory-foam topped mattress when I was having back trouble and tried the “get a better mattress” cure. It was complete waste of cash; after a short trial, I flipped my new mattress over and sleep on the other side.

As I discovered, I shift around too much to make use of memory foam. If you sleep like a log, memory foam is great; it’ll shape itself to your body and cradle you all night long. OTOH, if you’re sleeping like a log, why would be looking for a better mattress?

I roll around all night long. With memory foam, what this means is that every time I shift, I’m sleeping on a lumpy mattress again, because the foam resists changing shape (which is the point with memory foam) for a lag time of several minutes, depending on body heat. Ouch; I wuz robbed.

I had one for my old double sized bed. I was trying to get a few more year’s use out of the mattress, and it worked fine. I loved the memory foam. It was the 2 inch thick size, and only cost about $80. I had no problem with the sheets fitting, but then, the mattress was getting old, so it wasn’t as deep as the new ones are. Eventually I gave up and bought a new, king sized bed, but I still miss the memory foam. At that point, the memory foam was about two years old, but still in very good shape. I would buy another one but the new mattress is the pillow-top-type and I’m pretty sure the sheets wouldn’t fit over both the pillow top and the memory foam. Otherwise I would buy another one in a flash.

I have a memory foam mattress. The sheets were special order. It’s pretty comfortable. Way better than sleeping on springs.

Too much of a hippie here to give up the waterbed.

They are hot.

Hippies or waterbeds? Our waterbed heater recently bit the dust. What a challenge it was trying to find a replacement heater within driving distance. The heater on a waterbed has a thermostat that can be adjusted. My wife & I have come to a somewhat happy medium.

Sniff it first.
I’ve yet to have found one that wasn’t out gassing toxic chemicals.

There might be a nontoxic memory foam product out there, but I haven’t come across it yet.

I can scarcely think of a more tidy way to use a common household item to trash the environment with toxic chemicals. And as an added bonus you get to pay a fortune to purchase it and then figure out how to dispose of it when finished with it.

I’d rather sleep on pine needles. Or concrete.

They are hot in that they reflect body heat. If you thought you were already sweating to death in the summer, you will think you’re being roasted alive with one of those things.

djm

That’s it, exactly. They also mold up around you and block off any hope of ventilation.

Well, apparently most mattresses made in the past decade, unless they specify totally toxic chemical free, are outgassing toxic fumes.

I’m sleeping on an older cotton futon. Its not very soft but I use plenty of natural fiber stuffed pillows to accomodate it to what I need.
I keep my fingers crossed that none of my cats ever gets irritated at me enough to pee on it. I don’t know what I’d replace it with.

It’s been suggested to me to buy a latex mattress, but here’s the thing,
all mattresses sold these days (in the USA) have to have some kind of fire proofing.

Its been suggested to me to buy a latex mattress that’s covered with wool as fire proofing.
Yeah, right. Doesn’t wool release something like cyanide fumes when it burns?

I’ve been told a getting an Rx from a Dr. using the excuse of an allergy can be used to purchase a mattress without fire proofing,
but a lot of companies that claim their mattresses made from otherwise natural products refuse to say exactly what chemicals they use to fire proof those natural products so
getting the right Rx might be a challenge.

http://www.flobeds.com/latex/index.htm

http://www.flobeds.com/slats.htm

Not sure. Can’t remember.

I saw an episode of some how-its-made ripoff that showed a Swedish
matress made from horse hair (among other things), which cost $20,000.
It was entirely hand-made, they even had someone whose job it was to
fluff the horse hair by hand. Crazy. But definitely no toxic fireproofing!

Wait, here’s an article. It’s called “The Vividus”:
http://www.furnituretoday.com/article/CA6395870.html

Anyway, we got a 1" memory foam topper when the padding gave out on
our Kingsford mattress. We already had extra-deep sheets, so it was no big
deal. The mattress topper is not heat-retaining the way an entire mattress
made from memory foam is (though if you go larger than 1 inch, I don’t
know…)

:boggle:

I didn’t know such a thing was purchasable…
http://www.allergybuyersclubshopping.com/be-mp-cc-wool.html
Pricey, but non-toxic and hypoallergenic!