TandL, no of course not. You definitely give good advice and I respect many people’s opinions on here along with Phoenix, yours and other’s. My concerns of the low density base in the crazy quilt were based on information many people here have given, but I considered the crazy quilt since it’s BB, same as the Camilla and likely the same quality/value. Just in a separate cover, rather than directly under the latex. I’m just trying to find comfort and as decent quality as I can for my dollars. The talalay has a more plush feel that I prefer compared to dunlop, so if I was going to go with latex I’d rather the talalay.
The foundation you mentioned looks to be the wire grid top. They list theirs as a ‘genius’, I don’t know if that’s a brand or just an inhouse name. It appears to be the same as a lot of others I’d looked at before from companies like SpaSensations and some others found all over Amazon. Originally that was the one I was going to go with since it sounded really sturdy (2400lbs support) it sounded bullet proof. Reading some of the reviews, a number of people happened to mention sitting on the edge of the bed and the metal tube frame of it bending. Saying they just ‘bent’ it back into shape. I know sitting on the edge of the bed is one of the big no-no’s for pretty much any mattress. I tend to do it a lot to put on shoes and stuff like that. Because my room is cramped, the only real way I can orient my bed places it up against the corner of two adjoining walls and part of the foot of the bed is up against the end of my desk. (This is no BHG setup lol). Some of the things I have to take into consideration is that my other half is a bit… ‘fluffy’. That wire grid frame would be infinitely easier to set up, but due to the location of my bed it forces anyone getting in and out of bed to do so on just the one side and any sitting on the edge of the bed would be done on one side only. For the same $100 I’d spend on that metal frame, I can build one with 2x8 wood sides that I know won’t bend/break. I’d even considered other assemble from a box bed frames, but each and every one I came across said they had a 500lb weight limit which just wouldn’t work for me. Maybe it’s a technicality to make sure any breakage wouldn’t be blamed on them, but if the weight limit of a frame is 500lbs - minus around 100 for the mattress, another 200 for myself - it’s below the support limit I would be comfortable with. I’m only saving a little money building it myself compared to the low support limits of most wooden beds and in the case of that metal frame I think a solid wooden frame will be much sturdier for my situation for the same $100.
Far as I could tell, even with it’s low density in the crazy quilt foam - being the exact same as the BB Camilla base foam, the crazy quilt with separate 3" topper (available in different firmness options) would allow me to purchase a 1 piece $800 for $450 in 2 pieces. I’m sure technically it wouldn’t be ‘identical’ but as close as could be obtained - same materials, same densities, same company, for nearly half the price. That’s why it seemed a good value. Far as I could tell, the only drawback would be reducing my comfort ‘trial’ from 120 days to 30. I wouldn’t be losing my ability to swap out the comfort layer, the same 3" of latex, and in fact would only cost me 2/3 the price of return shipping exchanging the talalay on the stacked setup vs sending back the 3" latex from the Camilla. This has been the closest I’ve been able to get to comparing apples to apples, comparing the same 1.5 density poly base matched with 3" of talalay. It’s not two different base foam densities or talalay vs dunlop or LI latex vs FBM.
You mentioned mixing and matching toppers being potentially problematic - does anyone have any input regarding the same exact latex (3" LI talalay) being used as a comfort layer in the top 3" of a one piece mattress vs being used as the top 3" comfort layer as a topper over the same base foam? Maybe it’s not the quality I was thinking it was, but since the low cost crazy quilt is Brooklyn Bedding’s product and the same density as their Camilla and using the same latex they have to offer I thought I’d be getting decent quality from a company suggested here. I’m not trying to nitpick or be combative at all - just confused.
Originally trying to save money, I inquired about going the diy route with a place like FBM to save a few bucks. Everyone said they’re shaky, you might not get the quality you think you are. Better to stick with a reputable company like one listed among the vendors here on TMU. I keep researching and come up with a combination of materials made by a referred company here, and people seem to think it’s a poor choice or not the best value or below average quality to what I could find from a vendor listed here. When it’s exactly the product of someone listed here (Dreamfoam/BB). Just confused that’s all. Heck I thought I was ahead of the game, putting together for all intents and purposes an $800 mattress for half the price with the same quality materials of the same brand.
I have a tendency to be thick headed sometimes, and I could clearly see where I went wrong if I were considering a 1.5 density poly base under 3" of ‘engineered latex’ trying to save a few dollars compared to the same amount of 3lb density poly foam under 3" premium latex. That would make sense to me, well yea I’m saving a little but in turn I’m getting ‘what i paid for’. This isn’t the case though. Since the tri-comfort is an all latex, even if better value, it’s out of my price point and it’s not apples to apples the way the crazy quilt is to the Camilla. I was trying to compare apples to apples and not 2 different constructions, that’s why I mentioned the Camilla. It’s the closest all inclusive 1 piece mattress offered that resembles essentially what I’d be accomplishing using the CQ with the topper at half the cost. Again I might be crazy and I’m not in a position to comment on any of BB’s mattresses since I’m not familiar with them - but if I’d be making a questionable choice using BB’s CQ with topper for $450, wouldn’t it suggest being an outright bad choice to consider the Camilla (a quality product by a reputable company) for $800? Not sure where I’m going wrong.
To comment on your suggestion of dunlop, yes it’s definitely better priced latex and I don’t think it’s a bad material. Especially for a base material. If I were able to afford an all latex mattress I’m quite confident I would choose 3-6" of dunlop with a comfort layer of talalay over it. I would even prefer the dunlop for the middle and bottom layers due to its’ denser feel. Right now, I can only consider a thinner comfort layer of latex and this isn’t something where I would want to go with dunlop in either an all latex or hybrid construction so I leaned towards the talalay topper. The tri-zone is a 9" all latex mattress (save for the top 1" being poly) - but is made of (2) 4" layers of dunlop. It doesn’t offer a talalay comfort layer (unless this is something custom BB would do for an additional price and would push the $700 tri-comfort even further out of reach for me cost wise.