Hi Mike,
Firstly I'll come clean and say my experience is with UK cars, not Federal ones so take what I say with a pinch of salt.....
I've also cut back springs to either reduce height or increase spring rate slightly, so I can see where you're coming from. My attitude is that if the existing springs are no use to you and otherwise heading for scrap, why not experiment before you bin them ? I've always took the view that I'll learn a bit more and have a better idea of the specifications for when I come to buy new springs.
So with that in mind....
A couple of coils will slightly increase the spring rate but not by a massive amount. The published rate for UK springs was 116lbs/ins and running the calculations on the measurements I took from my OEM springs, it came out at 128lbs/ins - not enough to worry about. Repeating that calc with 2 coils removed comes in at 155lbs/ins, about a 17% increase. I'd be surprised if you notice that amount of increased rate.
Cutting off 4 coils would take you (on the measurements from my OEM springs) up to around 200lbs/ins, and you would notice that. I haven't run the calcs on that set-up but it wouldn't surprise me to find you'd also need to increase the rear springs to keep the same suspension frequency balance between front & rear.
So for my 2 cent's worth I'd suggest cutting off a couple of coils and see what it looks like. If it's still too high and you want to keep the same suspension frequencies I think you're into new springs at a shorter length, but at least you'll know what sort of length you'll need.
Brian