โJan-03-2016 07:50 AM
โMar-05-2016 05:20 AM
happycamper1942 wrote:
I tried an air mattress a few years ago in my camper and gave it up as in the cooler weather it would never warm up, we had to put lots of layers between us and it to stay warm.
โMar-04-2016 10:23 PM
Ranger Tim wrote:That insulating layer between you and the mattress will barely slow the heat transfer as it is flattened under you. You need a slow-conducting solid under your pad to slow heat transfer the greatest: liquid the fastest, gas the slower, solid the slowest. That's why ice melts slower if you remove the melted water in the cooler, same laws of thermodynamic transfer.
Any air cells with greater than 1/4 inch will convect heat away from the body. Keep an insulation layer between you and the mattress and you are good to go.
โJan-12-2016 03:36 AM
โJan-11-2016 06:13 PM
โJan-10-2016 11:01 AM
Thorin wrote:tplife wrote:
This is due to the heat-sink effect of thermo-negative hollow air mattresses. They are only for use in heated enclosures, because they exchange heat to be the same temp as outside air, so if you're sleeping on them, they're working 24/7 to suck the warmth out of you. A cellular foam mattress would need to be 5.0 R-value or better to overcome this, while a hollow air mattress (or cot) is measured at a negative 0.75.
But that doesn't mean there is no way no counter that. As long as there is no heat exchange between you body and the mattress you should be alright. Any memory foam topper would do the trick. ***Link Removed*** about how memory foam reflects your body heat back to you. Even though he's talking about back pain, it's still about keeping warm too.
โJan-07-2016 11:20 PM
tplife wrote:
This is due to the heat-sink effect of thermo-negative hollow air mattresses. They are only for use in heated enclosures, because they exchange heat to be the same temp as outside air, so if you're sleeping on them, they're working 24/7 to suck the warmth out of you. A cellular foam mattress would need to be 5.0 R-value or better to overcome this, while a hollow air mattress (or cot) is measured at a negative 0.75.
โJan-04-2016 01:56 PM
โJan-04-2016 01:24 PM
happycamper1942 wrote:
I tried an air mattress a few years ago in my camper and gave it up as in the cooler weather it would never warm up, we had to put lots of layers between us and it to stay warm.
โJan-04-2016 12:19 PM
โJan-03-2016 06:21 PM
travelnutz wrote:I'll take the beer.
Added:
In winter in the TC, we lay a heated mattress pad between the comforter and the fitted sheet and it's feels so good and draws so little amps from the inverter when not on shore power that it's no big deal. Heat rises and guess who's above the mattress pad? Can sleep in true comfort with only a top sheet covering you and easily adjust the heat level and the mattress firmness without even sitting up! What more could you want? An ice cold beer?
2004.5 Ram SLT LB 3500 DRW Quad Cab 4x4
1988 Bigfoot (C11.5) TC (1900# w/standard equip. per decal), 130 watts solar, 100 AH AGM, Polar Cub A/C, EU2000i Honda
Toad: 91 Zuke
โJan-03-2016 06:00 PM
โJan-03-2016 05:48 PM
โJan-03-2016 04:11 PM
โJan-03-2016 03:34 PM