How We Built This: Therm-a-Rest Self Inflating Mattresses
During Seattle’s economic downturn in the 1970's, a pair of out-of-work Boeing engineers were given a friendly challenge for their downtime.
“I wanted a better mattress,” remembers John Burroughs, a fellow climber who was fed up with the day’s thin, closed-cell foam pads. A better night on the ground would mean more energy for the trio's adventures in the mountains.
One day while gardening, a member of that trio, Jim Lea, had a breakthrough moment. After hearing the air escape from his leaky foam ground cushion, he saw an opportunity. What if that air could be controlled? You'd need an airtight barrier around the foam and a way to let the air in and out. Check. After a few crude experiments of sealing open cell foam inside airtight fabric and adding a valve, the world of outdoor comfort had shifted on its foundation.
The rest, as they say, is history. By 1972, Burroughs had dubbed their final prototype the “Therm-a-Rest”.
The First Self Inflating Camping Mattress
Over 40 years later, the Therm-a-Rest self inflating mattress is still made right here in Seattle, Our Seattle factory cranks out roughly 1,000 to 1,500 self inflating mattresses a day, converting giant foam "buns" into award-winning sleeping pads. For our customers in Europe, our self-inflating (and air) mattresses are manufactured in County Cork, Ireland, and shipped across Europe.Locally sourced foam is where it all begins
The process starts with the core of the mattress: the foam. We source our foam locally to ensure quality and reduce energy use. We've also worked for decades with our suppliers on getting the perfect amount of loft and density, which is key to our comfort and longevity. The foam itself arrives in 40”x 80” x 100” "buns" which we place into our foam cutter, slicing them down into the proper thicknesses, based on the loft of the end mattress. Next, we use a machine dubbed the "Foam Blanker" to punch the foam into one of our many mattress types. Most of these foam silhouettes are then molded, cut and expanded into a strong and lightweight core that has been meticulously designed for backcountry camping. A few are left blank for our solid core foam pads used in our luxurious outdoor beds such as the BaseCamp™. A future Trail Lite, on the other hand, will be passed to another machine that will through punch the foam with diamond-shaped holes, or star-shaped if it’s destined to become, say, a LuxuryMap.
Skew-Cut foam bound for the life of a ProLite.
If the foam is destined to be a part of our ProLite series, then the foam is cut with diagonal holes that have been designed to efficiently slow convective heat loss. Each little piece of foam punched out of these mattresses is then recycled and used in our Compressible Pillows.
Foam pieces getting saved for use with our Compressible Pillow.