I once (decades ago) made an "L" OB that worked really well.
There were 6 X 8" FR drivers.
Each leg of the L was about 1 meter high by about 700 or 800 mm.
3 drivers were placed in a vertical row on each leg, right next to the join.
Top and bottom on one side made a circuit with the middle driver on the other wing.
For the bass they were in parallel, giving nominally 2-3 ohms.
They were then in series with an air cored inductor, about 10 mH IIRC, 2 ohms, giving a more reasonable minimum impedance.
The mids were in series, with an L pad, to match the sensitivity of the woofers.
Below the baffle cut off, the woofers were counteracted by the low pass of the inductor.
Above the baffle cut off the woofers were low passed at the inductor 6 dB per octave slope.
Above the baffle cut-off, ther mids were essentially flat, and then rolled off below at high pass 6 dB per octave.
This gave an essentially flat response, first order crossover (truly a first order acoustic), with what must have been some ripple (didn't have test gear then).
(probably could have been improved with the "L" being slightly shorter on the mid side).
The design relied on the woofers and inductor interacting before the impedance rise that occurs with lowering frequency.
Howerever this still seemed to give something around 40-50 Hz (did reggae OK).
A long-winded attempt to describe what is essentially a pretty straight-forward design.

David