Answers, built from engineering.
Plain explanations of how mattresses, pillows, and sleep structure actually work — written by the people who build them.
Why mattresses sag in the middle.
Sagging isn't material wear — it's structural failure. The center third carries most of body weight, and most mattresses are built uniformly edge to edge.
Browse by question type.
Understanding Mattresses.
Why mattresses soften, why "firm" doesn't mean supportive, and what actually wears out. The mechanics behind it.
Buying Better.
Decision help before you buy. What to look at, what to ignore, and how to read marketing claims at face value.
Sleeping Better.
What your mattress is doing now — dips, morning soreness, sagging, uneven support. What the signs mean and what to check.
All articles.
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Why does my back hurt in the morning but feel fine by midday?
Read →Pain worst on waking that eases through the day is the clearest sign the cause is your sleep surface. The center sags, your spine bends out of neutral overnight, and it recovers once you're upright and moving.
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Why does my mattress have a dip in the middle?
Read →A dip forms in the middle because that's where your body puts the most load. The center third loses support first, and by the time you see the dip, the structure underneath has been failing for a while.
N°02 -
Why do heavier sleepers experience sagging faster?
Read →More weight means more force on the same center coils every night, so they reach fatigue sooner. Early sag for heavier sleepers is a construction mismatch, not misuse—the center wasn't built for the load.
N°03
The technology behind these answers.
Manchot's StasisLayer® System is the structural reasoning that informs every article here.
Engineering, when explained clearly, doesn't need to sell itself.