Mattress Cooler Classic - Chilled Mattress Topper Water Cooling System Ideal for Hot Sleepers and Night Sweats - 27"x63"
Are you ready for something better than a cooling blanket or a cooling comforter for night sweats? Our bed cooling system will regulate your body temperature and provide you with a better night's sleep. A cooler bed helps you fall asleep faster, decreases insomnia, releases melatonin, and decreases the risk for metabolic elements.
How it works: Chilled water circulates through a PVC vinyl mattress cooling pad. The chilled pad removes body heat, cooling you to a desired sleeping temp. After the water has absorbed your body heat, it's returned to the Mattress Cooler and recirculated.
Setup: 5-10 mins
1) Place cooling pad between mattress and a fitted sheet. To cool yourself, place the pad from head to foot. For two people, place across the mattress between your neck and waist. Avoid placement near sharp objects or high friction areas where you get in/out of bed.
2) Connect cooling pad tubes to the cooler. Remove the top lid so you can pour up to 2 quarts of water into the Mattress Cooler. The water tank has a water level to prevent overfilling the unit.
3) Press "on". If you get an E1 error, turn off the cooler, add water, then power on.
KEY FEATURES:
- Cooler sleeping temperature: Water circulates through the cooling pad, 27” x 63” x 1/16”, keeping you from overheating while you sleep
- Control temp: Feel 6-12 degrees cooler than your room. Set the fan to high F1 and continuous cycle D1, it'll feel like an ice pack! D2, D3, or D4 cycles provide less intense cooling
- Easy maintenance: The Mattress Cooler requires you to add about 1 quart of water a day, and drain the water tank every 14 days. The Mattress pad should be replaced about 4-6 months
- Helps your body recover: cooler sleeping assists the natural healing processes; helping with hot flashes, night sweats, menopause, back and body pains, and other sleep ailments
- Low white noise: The fan produces a low hum. At it's highest setting F1, it produces 40 decibels of sound, which is equivalent to a very quiet whisper you might hear in a library