Spec sheets are often treated as the objective truth in foam selection. Density and IFD dominate decision-making, but they only describe static performance under controlled conditions. Real-world applications are dynamic, and foam behavior shifts under load, over time, and across environmental conditions.
Fatigue resistance is another blind spot. Foam may meet initial specs but degrade under cyclic loading if the polymer structure isn’t optimized. This leads to performance loss well after the purchasing decision.
Temperature sensitivity further complicates matters. Viscoelastic foams, in particular, can become firmer or softer depending on ambient conditions, creating inconsistent end-use performance.
Spec sheets are useful, but incomplete. They should be treated as a baseline, not a decision tool. The better approach is to evaluate how foam performs within the actual application.
That’s where engineering matters. When foam is designed around real-world conditions, not just lab metrics, you get consistency, reliability, and performance that holds up over time.