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Visco Memory Foam Mattress Guide

Submitted by:
Chuck Harmon

Visco Memory Foam Mattress Guide


© Charles C Harmon Co /

http://www.memory-foam-buyers-guide.org


A
visco memory
foam mattress
gets it's name from the visco-elastic material
developed for NASA in the early 1970's in conjunction with the space program.


The astronauts in the space program were facing
incredible g-forces, at take-off and re-entry, and the materials that were
available, at that time, weren't sufficient to cushion their bodies. 


Of
course, they weren't looking for a memory foam mattress, they needed
seating that was more like a big, overstuffed recliner.


Visco memory foam was developed from foam that
had some unique characteristics, such as being open celled and able to return to their
original shape and resiliency after being compressed. 


You may have seen the commercial with the 30
ton steam roller smashing a mattress flat and how it slowly returns to it's
exact original shape...or maybe you're more familiar with the picture of a hand
above a mattress with the hand print still showing on it.


Both illustrations are meant to show you the
slow recovery of visco memory foam.


Because the billions of cells, in a visco
memory foam mattress, are open, air can slowly
escape from them and pass into other cells that are adjacent. 


As you lie
on a visco memory foam mattress, it "melts away" from you until your body is
completely and evenly supported over it's entire surface.


That's what has been termed by some as feeling like
you're floating in space.  (Even though I love my mattress, I've never felt
like that was a good explanation of how it feels)


A visco memory foam mattress is temperature
sensitive, so it reacts to your body temperature by softening where your body is
in contact with the mattress.  If you have an injury, with a fever, the
mattress is softer under that place on your body.


In the beginning developments of this material, it was
too expensive to be used for residential consumer mattresses and

pillows.


Over time, the manufacturing costs have been whittled to
a point that a good memory foam mattress is as

reasonably priced
as a good innerspring mattress and there is no comparison
in the comfort of the two.


Memory foam is now being combined with other materials
to meet the needs of the vast multitude of consumers who are looking for:



  • a better night's sleep

  • relief from back, neck or leg pain

  • relief from a partner's restless movement

  • better circulation

  • a compromise to a softer feel for one person while
    maintaining the support the other person is used to from a firm mattress


Schedule some time to do some

memory foam mattress pricing
comparisons and you'll see that you can,
affordably, be sleeping on a mattress that is great for your body, health and
your budget.



About The Author:

Chuck Harmon is the author of several articles on memory foam mattresses, including The 5 Deadliest Sins Most People Commit When Buying A Memory Foam Mattress...And How To Avoid Them. He is co-owner of Tahoe Mattress Co.,LLC, a Comfor-Pedic Memory Foam Products Retailer

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