Wife and I have a memory foam style type bed. It has a “lifetime” warranty. It was sold to us as never having to replaced due to durability. Fact is it’s 13 years old and has served its purpose. But as I’ve gotten older, it’s becoming more difficult to get comfortable overnight, constantly tossing and turning etc. After talking to the wife she’s having the same issues.
So my question to you fellow planeteers: what’s your sleeping pad setup? I’m just looking at other options.
We just recently replaced our 20 + year old mattress. I did a quick internet search and ended up ordering a Saatva https://www.saatva.com/mattresses. They delivered it and hauled off the old mattress. So far it's been a big improvement. We went with the Classic.
And I hated the waterbeds. Terrible for sex and hard to even get out of in the morning. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
Okay, that settles it. I'm going to start a waterbed company. Who wants to invest? We all liked them.
I actually checked on why waterbeds fell out of favor. I guess it wasn't insurance related; rather, it was new, high quality mattresses becoming available that equaled the comfort of water beds without the pain in the ass of dealing with waterbeds. So they basically went the way of the 8-track and gigantic tube TVs.
I remember when we moved into our current home in 2001, we purchased both the water bed and one of those huge TVs that felt like it weighed five hundred pounds. IIRC I spent $1,000 on the TV, and five years later I gave it to my next door neighbor in exchange for him helping me move it out of the house. :-) [Reply]
My mom still has an old freefloat waterbed in her basement, which has been in the same location for like 25 years. Slept on it last year during hunting season. Yup, forgot to turn the heater on before bed. Went to bed drunk. Woke up in the middle of the night, and yes that damn bed was 40 degrees. LOL. [Reply]
Originally Posted by displacedinMN:
Had a foam bed for a long time. It has two divots in it. One where I slept and the other where I slept when we rotated it 180 degrees.
We bought an original mattress factory bed. Has done well. It is weird having to flip it every 90 days. But it stops the divots.
I did like the single spring and foam beds. But we decided on OMF. I do not know if it is available in all markets.
Since the mattress industry quit making flippable mattresses we have bought 4 new King mattresses. Each around a thousand to fifteen hundred each. Sealy, Beautyrest, you name it, we have had them and they all get the divots.
This last one from Mattress Firm had only lasted two years before it sucked.
Originally Posted by Bowser:
I've always been told to never go cheap on beds or mattresses because you spend over a third of your life in bed. I got a Sealy a couple of years ago and I sleep like a champ on it.
I have a Sealy Posture Pedic. It is a good mattress.
Originally Posted by displacedinMN:
Had a foam bed for a long time. It has two divots in it. One where I slept and the other where I slept when we rotated it 180 degrees.
We bought an original mattress factory bed. Has done well. It is weird having to flip it every 90 days. But it stops the divots.
I did like the single spring and foam beds. But we decided on OMF. I do not know if it is available in all markets.
Originally Posted by HemiEd:
Since the mattress industry quit making flippable mattresses we have bought 4 new King mattresses. Each around a thousand to fifteen hundred each. Sealy, Beautyrest, you name it, we have had them and they all get the divots.
This last one from Mattress Firm had only lasted two years before it sucked.
Well that one didn't last any longer than the others. Been causing us back pain for the last year.
To be honest though, we flipped it a few times, but not every 90 days as flipping that heavy king size mattress was quite a job with a ceiling fan in the bedroom.
Paid $20 to the company we just bought our new mattress from to haul it off. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
I had a waterbed (unbaffled - I was a poor peasant boy) when I was in my 20s. I really liked it and my cat loved it, though I got nervous when she would knead the sheets with her claws.
Waterbeds completely disappeared, it seems. I'm not sure why. They seemed like a viable product niche.
Aw.. Their still around. Just gotta look around maybe a little. Hell I think Walmart still sells conditioner and mattress heating pads. [Reply]