Subject: The persistent V-berth bedding choices - once again ?
I know, I know.... the V-berth bedding comfort issue has been discussed ad nauseam.....
In my case I thought I had solved this to a large degree when owning our R-25 (Classic) by shaping a 3" memory form mattress to the contours of the V-berth. I did this and shaped the foam to be triangular such that it filled the entire V-berth area. This aspect meant having to crawl head first into the V-berth and then repositioning to get tucked up into bed. I managed this without too much hassle. However, my 1st mate had a real challenge doing this and it eventually lead to having to find land based accommodations at places we cruised to. This was inconvenient and costly at times. It eventually lead to us using the boat less and less for extended cruises.... and eventually reached the point where we sold the R-25. In retrospect, I guess I could have shaped the memory foam differently by notching out a rectangle at the V-berth entrance that was equal to the aft central V-berth's rectangular stock cushion. This would have made things easier to get into the bedding. For long enough I simply would roll the foam mattress up into the V-berth's bow area when underway and removed the entrance cushion for making it easy for 1st mate to sit sideway in the V-berth.
We had the R-21EC for a period of time and we had no intent on sleeping in its V-berth and use land based accommodations when overnighting at marinas.
We are now entering a 3rd phase with having to deal with sleeping on the boat as we will have a new 2018 R-27 by mid Aug 2017. This RT model has a much improved V-berth arrangement and can be used as an easy to enter forward saloon during cruising. With its convenient raised center table it has seating for 4 comfortably.
I'm now trying to figure out the best approach for V-berth sleeping arrangements and I'm convinced I can make it work far better than in our previous R-25.
First, I'm abandoning the use of memory foam as it's just to cumbersome, is heavy, is bulky when rolled up and would simply give me the same result as we had for the R-25.
Instead, I'm thinking of having sleeping bags for 1st mate and me with full zipper sides making it easy to slip into for nighttime. The stock mattress shape at the V-berth entrance is conducive for allowing this so no changes need to be made. For each sleeping bag I intend to use an REI Therm-a-Rest LuxuryMap Mattress measuring 20" x 72". These mattresses are 3" thick with "bump-swallowing loft" (using the sales jargon here 😉 ). They are "self-inflating -- that is, compressible foam core that expands to inflate with maybe a few breaths for desired firmness". The reviews I've read so far give me positive thoughts that this type mattress will work for us. The important aspects for me using this approach is that it has a high degree of being successful, the sleeping bags and the mattresses can be rolled to very small sizes using compression straps and weight is next to nothing when compared to a queen size 3" memory foam mattress that simply isn't practical for being rolled up to a small size.
I had been in contact with http://yachtbedding.com who have yet to make the proper patterns for the new 2018 R-27. They make a good product but could not say when they would have something for the new R-27, plus they were unsure how they would shape and construct the toppers etc. They are also quite expensive and the toppers would mean I would be faced with the same challenge as I had on our previous R-25. Thus, I've abandoned the Yachtbedding.com approach.
I've run dollar numbers for my sleeping bags and Therm-a-Rest mattresses and have reached a figure of around $410 total.
If anyone sees any flaws with my new approach for V-berth bedding comfort please let me know.
Thanks for once again having the patience for dealing with this bedding issue. 🙂 🙂
I know, I know.... the V-berth bedding comfort issue has been discussed ad nauseam.....
In my case I thought I had solved this to a large degree when owning our R-25 (Classic) by shaping a 3" memory form mattress to the contours of the V-berth. I did this and shaped the foam to be triangular such that it filled the entire V-berth area. This aspect meant having to crawl head first into the V-berth and then repositioning to get tucked up into bed. I managed this without too much hassle. However, my 1st mate had a real challenge doing this and it eventually lead to having to find land based accommodations at places we cruised to. This was inconvenient and costly at times. It eventually lead to us using the boat less and less for extended cruises.... and eventually reached the point where we sold the R-25. In retrospect, I guess I could have shaped the memory foam differently by notching out a rectangle at the V-berth entrance that was equal to the aft central V-berth's rectangular stock cushion. This would have made things easier to get into the bedding. For long enough I simply would roll the foam mattress up into the V-berth's bow area when underway and removed the entrance cushion for making it easy for 1st mate to sit sideway in the V-berth.
We had the R-21EC for a period of time and we had no intent on sleeping in its V-berth and use land based accommodations when overnighting at marinas.
We are now entering a 3rd phase with having to deal with sleeping on the boat as we will have a new 2018 R-27 by mid Aug 2017. This RT model has a much improved V-berth arrangement and can be used as an easy to enter forward saloon during cruising. With its convenient raised center table it has seating for 4 comfortably.
I'm now trying to figure out the best approach for V-berth sleeping arrangements and I'm convinced I can make it work far better than in our previous R-25.
First, I'm abandoning the use of memory foam as it's just to cumbersome, is heavy, is bulky when rolled up and would simply give me the same result as we had for the R-25.
Instead, I'm thinking of having sleeping bags for 1st mate and me with full zipper sides making it easy to slip into for nighttime. The stock mattress shape at the V-berth entrance is conducive for allowing this so no changes need to be made. For each sleeping bag I intend to use an REI Therm-a-Rest LuxuryMap Mattress measuring 20" x 72". These mattresses are 3" thick with "bump-swallowing loft" (using the sales jargon here 😉 ). They are "self-inflating -- that is, compressible foam core that expands to inflate with maybe a few breaths for desired firmness". The reviews I've read so far give me positive thoughts that this type mattress will work for us. The important aspects for me using this approach is that it has a high degree of being successful, the sleeping bags and the mattresses can be rolled to very small sizes using compression straps and weight is next to nothing when compared to a queen size 3" memory foam mattress that simply isn't practical for being rolled up to a small size.
I had been in contact with http://yachtbedding.com who have yet to make the proper patterns for the new 2018 R-27. They make a good product but could not say when they would have something for the new R-27, plus they were unsure how they would shape and construct the toppers etc. They are also quite expensive and the toppers would mean I would be faced with the same challenge as I had on our previous R-25. Thus, I've abandoned the Yachtbedding.com approach.
I've run dollar numbers for my sleeping bags and Therm-a-Rest mattresses and have reached a figure of around $410 total.
If anyone sees any flaws with my new approach for V-berth bedding comfort please let me know.
Thanks for once again having the patience for dealing with this bedding issue. 🙂 🙂