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As my significant other and I have aged, our bed keeps getting higher and higher as we keep buying thicker mattresses and adding foam toppers in the quest to make it softer on our aging bodies. Recently the wife has begun complaining about the difficulty of getting in and out of bed because of its height. She wanted me to cut some off the legs to shorten it, but I was reluctant to chance ruining it since I had spent 6 months building it out of solid walnut a number of years ago.
I suggested we replace our existing 9" box springs with low-profile, 5 1/2" units and she agreed, but a trip to the store revealed a price tag of over $400, more than we were willing to spend. On the way home, the wife suggested maybe we could just cut ours in half. Yeah, right, I chuckled, unable to imagine where I would even start such a project. This wasn't the first time she had suggested something that sounded utterly ridiculous. Well, guess what... that is exactly what we wound up doing. Here's the pics.
Here is the second box spring after we removed the 25,000 staples holding the cover on...
Here's a picture of the innards...
Another view...
Here I've begun cutting it in half, one spring at a time...
And a closer look showing where each spring is cut...
Here's how it looks after cutting all the springs and removing the top. Now I have to remove the residue, yuck, more staples...
All cleaned up, ready to start putting it back together...
And here's the top half back on the base, ready to start stapling...
The first box spring is completely back together and is 3" shorter than before. This second one is ready to be put back together. In addition to some marriage points, I did get a new tool out of the deal. There was no room under the metal spring framework to hammer staples into the wood capturing the foot of each riser. So, I bought a new pneumatic palm nailer. It did work just find with the staples once a rhythm was established.
Chuck