h a l f b a k e r yViva los semi-panaderos!
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
|
how do your feet get really cold ? do they sweat too much & the sweat evaporates to give cold sensation? please explain. does your pillow material have thermal insulation properties ? |
|
|
The idea was to just use a normal pillow sitting on a refrigerated pad of material that has an active heat transfer to a radiator under your feet. Not very complicated. Feet are cold because they are at the extremities of your body and your brain is more important than your feet. It's quite a common complaint... |
|
|
But that damn compressor...you'd have
to remote it. I like the idea though.
I don't have the problem with my feet,
but my head does tend to overheat.
Pillow flipping is my solution. |
|
|
yeah, pillow flipping is what i use as well - until you need to swap in a new pillow, and then you have to wake up the girlfriend..! You could just have the compressor under the bed :
[__o__]
with your head over the first square bracket and your feet over the second. |
|
|
[miasere]excellent application of common sense & looking at the things in different manner. |
|
|
No, it'll come in handy for somebody, someday - and that's a good thing. |
|
|
May I suggest the category "Home: Bed: Temperature" ? other than that, + |
|
|
baked:
as
"blood circulation"
(we're all born with it.) |
|
|
Perhaps you have this problem because in Australia all people hang with their head down from the earth so feet don't "get" cold when you go to bed. They actually "are" cold because they lacked blood circulation all day long. You just didn't notice before because you were too busy keeping a cool head during the day. To test this hypothesis I suggest that you stay in bed for a few days and watch what happens. |
|
| |