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Estimated reading time: 7 minutes
Many purists do not consider a Tube Type Waterbed a true Waterbed rather they consider it a hybrid waterbed. This blog post highlights the ten problems and benefits of tube or cylinder-type softside waterbeds.
Table of Contents
1. Tube or Cylinder beds look and make like a regular mattress and box springs.
This might seem obvious but people choose tube soft side water beds because they use sheets and bedding found at any store in all the familiar sizes. They even adapt to conventional beds but do not look like a 1970s water bed
2. Softside Tube Waterbeds weigh less
A big complaint of flotation beds is the waterbed weight, which can go as high as 2000lbs in a king-size Hardside Waterbed. However, a king-size tube bed can weigh in at only about 700-800lbs. Most are in the 4” depth range whereas a deep fill soft side can range from 6”-13” with 7”- 8” being the most common cavity depth.
3. Moving a Tube Waterbed is much easier than traditional waterbeds.
With 10 tubes in a king and 8 in a queen, the individual tubes weighing 60-80 lbs can be removed from the bed without being drained and moved as individual pieces.
4. Easy to assemble.
You just put the foundation and the shell of the softside tube bed on a proper bed frame and lay the individual tubes in it. If the bed is not quite where you want it just remove the tubes slide the bed to where you want it and place the tubes back into it with no draining or filling.
5. Filling tubes does require running a garden hose through the house.
You can fill your tube in another location such as a bathroom or outside so you don’t have to worry about spilling water in the bedroom.
6. Delivering the bed with the tubes already filled.
This makes for a quick delivery and no worrying about a water source in the customers’ home.
7. You can adjust mattress firmness.
Varying the amount of water put in the tubes can change the feel of the mattress or firmness from side to side. Baffled tubes can be purchased that can stop the motion and make the bed much firmer.
8. Determining which tube leaks is easy and replacing it is even easier.
Usually, if a tube has been leaking one of them will have less water than the others. Simply repair or replace the bad tube. 1 Free flow tube costs $20-$30 and baffled tube can cost up to $40. Replacement waterbed bladders for a deep-filled bed can cost hundreds of dollars.
9. Does not require a waterbed heater.
An extra thick cover is used to insulate them. If a heater is used it must be a low-watt heater made specifically for a shallow fill or tube bed.
10. Tube waterbeds cost less.
This is not always the case but tube beds generally speaking usually offer a firmer feel for less money than a deep-fill baffled mattress.
Somma is probably the most recognizable brand name for tube beds sold. Don’t get us wrong many people have enjoyed these beds over the years, however, our 24-plus years of handling their service issues is the reason we are not big fans of their design. At STL Beds we have limited our sales of them and even removed them from our showroom floor. Their high failure rate, lack of support, durability, and the fact that they feel nothing like a true waterbed puts them at the bottom of our recommendation list.
Our suggestion is to consider a true deep fill softside waterbed. If your response is that tube waterbeds don’t feel like a waterbed then I think you can see why we believe the tube bed is a hybrid bed with a lot of troublesome issues making nearly any other mattress a better option.
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