Hello!
I hope everyone had a good June and will have a happy 4th of July!
Phoenix, I have some more questions for you if you donât mind. (And thanks for all of your help).
As you know from my earlier posts, I was having a problem with âtentingâ in the middle of my King sized mattress even though I only have had it a very short period of time. I have gone through a few different online options now and fully realize the reason (as you suspected) is that my frame is not supportive enough. Therefore, I am working on returning it and getting a better frame.
I am probably going to go with this from Ikea since it has solid, closely spaced slats (thanks for that information elsewhere on this forum!):
My question is this thoughâWill I still likely have an issue with a hump in the middle since this king foundations are usually two separate pieces usually just held by wing nuts? I have actually read that king mattresses can have center-hump issues because many times their foundations are two pieces so the center support being so rigid, along with the fact nobody sleeps in the middle, cause humps pretty regularly.
I guess what I am asking is, will this be a regular occurrence that I could just AVOID altogether by getting a queen size instead? We had a super cheap queen before and never had this issue. I wonder if the foundations being one piece for a queen would help. I expect some hump due to the sheer size of a king. But I donât expect a huge lump immediately upon use if that makes sense.
Also, if I may, another comment/question. I reached out too Addable as they are a trusted member. They were very helpful and frank with me that their mattress probably would not be a good fit and they recommended a spring might work well for me with a topper because a spring can give better support for my BMI (about 31).
Soooo, I was looking at some Ikeas spring and foam mattress options again and noticed something: They describe some of the foams in their mattresses as âHigh Resilience foamsâ. I tend to think it is actual HR since not all of their mattresses state that. My question is-do you know if they are actually high resilience as opposed to just High Density?
Here are some examples:
Thanks in advance!