pillow top mattress hump middle

pillow top mattress hump middle

pillow top mattress hump in middle

Pillow Top Mattress Hump Middle

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Date Purchased: Jan 2011 reviewed on Dec 11, 2016 Date Purchased: Jan 2013 reviewed on Aug 04, 2016 Don't get pillow top!!! reviewed on Jul 09, 2016 Date Purchased: Feb 2016 reviewed on Jul 01, 2016 reviewed on Mar 02, 2016 Worst bed I have ever had reviewed on Jul 04, 2015 Don't waste your money - Good at first and then turns bad. reviewed on Aug 26, 2014 Medium pillow top at first was comfortable Over time it sinks in at the middle of the bed. reviewed on Feb 18, 2014 So comfortable I can sleep anytime - we're both shift workers and need to sleep at different times. We don't disturb each other getting in and out of bed as it is very stable. Very very heavy - I dread ever having to move it! reviewed on Dec 02, 2013 reviewed on Aug 17, 2013 Feels beautiful and supportive. Reading these reviews put me off a bit, but lucky i did it for myself I have had the same bed for over a year with the matching base and absolutely hate the bed!




Having spent months at chiro and physio trying to work out why my back was so sore, it came down to the f... posted on Feb 04, 2014 Worst mattress Ive ever had reviewed on Jul 21, 2013 Springs collapse, bed dips, hurts your back. Dont buy King Coil. reviewed on Jun 24, 2013 Springs collapse, bed dips, bad for your back. 1 of 2 pagesSleep Train> Locations> California> Petaluma Sleep Train locations in Petaluma offer guests a premier shopping experience. Sleep Train provides our guests access to premium mattresses from top name brands combined with superior services and highly trained sleep experts. We also offer a variety of mattress sales and financing offers throughout the year, so check back often! As Sleep Train has grown from its first location to over 300 stores, our mission remains the same: always provide superior service, the best selection, and unbeatable prices – all backed by our 100-day low price guarantee. Our stores in Petaluma offer same day delivery on all in-stock purchases made by 2 p.m., plus we will set-up your new mattress and remove your old set.




Whether you are suffering from backaches, snoring or just can’t fall asleep, Sleep Train in CA has the right sleep solution for you. Our highly trained sleep experts are on hand to answer any questions and help match you with a mattress we guarantee you’ll love. Sleep Train’s goal is to provide you with the most comfortable, positive and well-informed mattress-buying experience that you won’t find anywhere else. At Petaluma Sleep Train locations, you will find premium mattresses from top name brands, including Tempur-Pedic, Serta iComfort, Sealy Posturepedic, Beautyrest and more. Sleep Train is your ticket to a better night's sleep.® Sleep Train Petaluma - Kenilworth Dr Reviews - page 2AS big-ticket purchases go, few are as baffling as buying a mattress.Major manufacturers like Serta and Sealy sell models under different names at different chains, usually in slightly different iterations. , well, forget it. Sleepy’s doesn’t sell the Backsaver Burlywood Plush.The Sealy Backsaver Tervington?




Come and get it. .Worse, even models that rival manufacturers say are similar often are not. As one industry veteran explained to Consumer Reports, there’s only one way to be certain about what coils and padding are inside that bland white exterior.“It’s difficult to compare mattresses unless you cut them open,” Eugene Schayer, who worked for two major manufacturers, told the magazine. “The retailers demand exclusivity of the cover and label. They don’t want their product shopped.” The more the Haggler looked at the mattress market, the more he came to conclude — reluctantly, because the Haggler is not naturally inclined to cynicism — that the players in this business are trying to make it confusing. An outlandish thought, right? An industry would have to be pretty darn craven to spend so much energy thwarting comparison-shopping, would it not?But even the pros at Consumer Reports, not an easily daunted group, took a look at this game of three-mattress monte, scratched their heads and walked away.




The magazine doesn’t offer buying advice about specific models because, it says, it can’t figure out a way to provide apples-to-apples comparisons. Instead, it reviews brands and stores.“Shopping for a mattress,” the magazine concluded, “can be a nightmare.”If you’re lucky, the nightmare ends when your mattress is delivered. But not everyone is lucky. Q. Two years ago, we bought a Stearns & Foster king-size mattress that cost $2,500 and came with a 10-year warranty. When it arrived, we immediately noticed that there was a lump, about the width of your hand, running down the middle of the mattress, from top to bottom. We thought it would settle as we used it, but after a few months it was so uncomfortable we could not sleep on it. We complained to Sealy, which owns the brand, and the company sent a service guy to take a look. For reasons that I can’t explain, Sealy has decided that in order for a customer to have a legitimate warranty claim, the “distortion,” as its known in the business — either a lump or a depression — needs to be at least one and a half inches.




Well, our lump is an inch and a quarter.As far as Sealy is concerned, we’re out of luck. We wrote letters and threatened to sue, but that didn’t work. We have swapped our new mattress for the old one we’d had in our guest room.Even if I don’t get any satisfaction, I would love to warn others that is a company that won’t stand behind its product. —Roger Grosswald, Charlotte, N.C.A. The Haggler read this letter and his first thought was: an inch and a half? Who came up with that number? Because it seems rather stinting. If you have a mattress with a lump even half that size you might want a new mattress, or maybe a fix to the recently purchased mattress, if a fix is possible. These seemed like issues to discuss with Sealy, which, by way of background, is based in Trinity, N.C. One of its major shareholders is the leveraged-buyout firm Kohlberg, Kravis & Roberts, which helped take the company public in 2006. Getting a response took some nudging, but an e-mail arrived from Jodi Allen, Sealy’s chief marketing officer:“We initially determined that Mr. Grosswald’s bed fell outside the limits of our warranty based on the established criteria.




However, since Mr. Grosswald is such a valued and loyal Stearns & Foster customer, Sealy is working with him to replace his mattress.”The next day Sealy contacted Mr. Grosswald and offered him a new mattress.This news delighted Mr. Grosswald and gave him an acute case of what psychologists call “hagglerphoria,” a complicated mental state characterized by a mix of joy and anger-tinged sadness — the first stemming from the results, the second from the realization that it took the Haggler’s interventions to get those results. Ms. Allen wrote in a follow up e-mail that the inch-and-a-half rule was created in the mid-90s, when thicker mattresses were introduced to the market. The theory is that any distortion that is less than an inch and a half is the result of normal wear, or “body impression break-in,” as Ms. Allen put it.By all means, some standard is needed. But an inch and a half? When the Haggler asked for tales of mattress woe two weeks ago, he received many like Mr. Grosswald’s, about a variety of manufacturers.

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