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Slide-out dog bed

Remarka6le
Amassing an Audience
Remarka6le
Remarka6le
Amassing an Audience

 

A dog bed made from Melamine and Pine to slide under a bed.

 

Dog_bed.jpg

 

The project

 

When we first moved into our new home, we wanted to give our dogs an alternative to sleeping on our bed at night (they frequently switch between our bed or the floor). My wife made a bed, and while it is sturdy and also slides under the bed, it was difficult to make and has some notable flaws.

 

Now that our new Rottweiler Rollo is approaching 60kg, we decided to make a second one just for him to use. 

 

Tools and materials

 

Tools and materials used in the project:

 

 

Cut.png


Steps

 

Step 1 

 

Cut the Pine to the required size. For me this was having 2 x 1200mm long pieces of Pine and 2 x 562mm for the ends. (Note) As the base was already of size, it didn't need cutting.

 

Step 2

 

Place the cut pieces of Pine onto the base and create the box. Drill some pilot holes and then use the screws to bind everything together. 

 

Step 3

 

Now cut the 42mm Pine to size within and place it flat. It should look like the image below. Drill more pilot holes and begin fixing the 184mm Pine to the 42mm pieces and the 42mm pieces to the base. 

 

Base.png

 

Step 4

 

The dog bed should be pretty solid now, but we're going to flip it over and drill some pilot holes that go from the base into the 184mm Pine. This will ensure everything is together. I've marked out where I placed the nails in the image below. 

 

Nail Positions.png

 

Step 5

 

At this stage, I would cover the screw holes if you wanted to conceal them. I didn't. But I took this moment to plane the edges, just because I had images of my son hitting his head on the hard surfaces in the future. 

 

Pai_nt.png

 

Step 6

 

Time to paint. Flip it again so that it's the right way up. I only needed the one spray can for this one with an even coat around and inside of it. Once the paint is dry, figure out where you want the handles to be and place them on. These are strong enough to carry the box around, but they are only used to slide the bed in and out. 

 

Give it a day outside (where it can't get wet) to get rid of the spray paint smell and you're done. 

 

The bed itself looks great. I've used three memory foam pillows inside to form the dog bed (our dogs prefer these over actual dog beds) and a blanket the dogs lay down on out in our lounge room (so it has a similar smell). Luna, the smaller of the two, instantly claimed it once I set it up.

 

279287737_2095943650613228_6680749635944210268_n.jpg

 

Rollo later claimed it back once it was set up. He loved it. 

 

ROLLO_518003283297042_6383559440780886084_n.jpg

 

The unpainted Melamine base makes pulling the bed out and back in a breeze on carpet. Here's the bed pulled out.

 

Pull Out.png

 

Going in with a plan certainly sped up the build, as did the base being the exact size I needed (just ensuring everything fitted on it). When my wife built hers, it probably took the better part of an afternoon. This one took a little over an hour (not including the drying time and time spent outside). 

 

We're really happy with how this turned out. 

 

FINAL_BED.jpg

 

Comments
homeinmelbourne
Becoming a Leader

I love this! Rollo looks so pleased with his bed.

Well done on an amazing project!

Dave-1
Home Improvement Guru

Good Morning @Remarka6le 

Thats a nice idea and looks good to boot! Does your dog use it or just look at it and decide on the bed? :smile:

 

I like the added brass handles!

 

Dave

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