Danny, does putting sides on a baffle (as in the Super V) lower the frequency for the baffle step loss, without increasing surface reflections?

With an open baffle you can still have a step loss but you also get a dipole bump in the output.
Here is the same 5.25" woofer on two different 8" wide baffles with no network. One baffle is a small ported box (red line). The other is on an open baffle (green line).

Notice on the 8" wide ported box that the baffle step loss can be seen really taking a dive below 800Hz.
On the open baffle there is a huge peak at 1kHz. Making the baffle wider shifts that to a lower range, and reduces the height of the peak.
The idea of the Super-V baffle to shift it down into a lower range where the output is naturally rolling off. With the right sized baffle you can actually get a pretty flat response down to where the driver has a natural -6db down at the 200Hz crossover point. This is what was done with the Super-V baffle. It is 13" wide around the driver plus the wings on both sides. It makes it out to be about 23" wide if measuring from the middle of the driver starting at the back edge of one wing and wrapping around the front of the baffle to the back edge of the other wing. And the frontal area of the baffle is not much wider than the driver itself.