Hi Jayman,
Part of the problem when consumers are buying a mattress that is called a ālatexā mattress from a major manufacturer is that most of the time it isnāt what could be reasonably be called a latex mattress at all. Most of the time, there is several inches of polyfoam above the latex (the type of foam that breaks down) and often the latex layers are hidden in between other layers of the mattress. Unfortunately when people buy these, they believe they are buying a latex mattress when they are buying a mattress which has some latex in it. The Dr Breus line for example is being vigorously marketed as a latex mattress when in fact it is a polyfoam mattress with some latex in it (in the top end model less than half of the thickness of the mattress is actually latex and the lower models are significantly less than that).
The old spring air latex (four seasons in the US) were the same way ⦠a recipe for the body impressions that you are experiencing not because of the latex in them but because of the inches of cheap soft polyfoam that you were lying on and the construction and layering of the mattress. Even the versions with a latex core (instead of a polyfoam core) had way too much polyfoam above the latex. Itās no wonder Spring Air went bankrupt.
The only way to know whether you are buying a latex mattress is to see the layer by layer description of the mattress. If you put several inches of polyfoam over latex, the mattress will have the typical impression issues of a polyfoam mattress.
The reason I like latex is because of a unique combination of qualities that are not shared with other types of foam ⦠not the least of these is its durability (it will outlast even a good innerspring). A material however doesnāt āmakeā a mattress a āgoodā mattress for any individual. It may be a quality mattress but completely unsuitable for a particular individual. The layer combinations and how they work together are what makes a mattress suitable for each individual and their unique height, weight, sleeping positions, and preferences. Even the best material and the highest quality mattress with the wrong construction is a recipe for pressure issues or back issues.
There are 6 overviews on the site in the āmattressesā section. If you read these alone (starting with this one) then you will likely know more than the majority of salespeople in the mass market outlets.
Whoever contributed to or compiled that list has no idea about mattress construction. Since innerspring support cores completely dominate the market (although thatās changing) ⦠then every unhappy consumer that has a bunch of cheap soft polyfoam over their innerspring which breaks down (which it will since the comfort layers are the weak link in a mattress) will believe that innerspring mattresses are ābadā when in fact they were probably still fine and of course it was the polyfoam causing the iimpressions and soft spots in the mattress.
Hopefully you will have the chance to try a mattress that really is a latex mattress (latex in the comfort layer with either no polyfoam or at worst 1" of polyfoam in the comfort layer). The other option is really memory foam but this is just polyfoam with additional chemicals added so if the memory foam is low density (like in the iComfort) then it will almost certainly suffer the same fate as the Spring Air.
The weak link in a mattress is the part which āwears outā first and this will ruin the mattress no matter what other materials are in it. When polyfoam wears out ⦠it still has just enough ability to recover its shape so the softening is not covered because of the warranty exclusion (usually 1.5" or more). This softening makes the mattress completely unsuitable for sleeping on but when the weight on the mattress is removed ⦠it still ālooksā OK even though it isnāt.
I wouldnāt buy a mattress with too much polyfoam or low density memory foam in the comfort layer no matter what the price (unless I was happy with the idea of throwing it away in a couple of years or so or even less). The discount would only really have value if they had a mattress that was worth buying at 50% off the deep discount price ⦠and many chain stores who mainly carry major brands donāt.
Your best bet IMO is always a local factory direct manufacturer who knows what they put in the mattress and why. As a rule ⦠this is where you will find the best value and more importantly yet ⦠the knowledge and expertise to fit a mattress to your circumstances. The quality and durability of a mattress is important of course ⦠but even the highest quality mattress that isnāt suitable for you is still a ābadā choice. Back pain and sleeping issues IMO arenāt worth it at any price.
Phoenix