Let's put a little meat on what I said about comb filtering.
I have some 3" TB full range drivers in small cube sized ported boxes. I have a pair of them. The cubes are 5" wide by 5.5" tall, and 6.5" deep.
This is the woofer model:
http://www.tb-speaker.com/products/w3-871scSo I set one on top of the other and send them both a full range signal. The green and red lines are each one playing individually and the blue line is the two of them playing together. Note the 6db gain that you get when they are in phase.

Also note that the blue line showing them completely in phase across the whole range is very hard to achieve. If just a quarter of an inch off then the top end starts to drop away. And this is from 1 meter away with a 1 watt input.
This one was taken exactly the same way. They were each shot individually (red and green lines) and then the blue line was the two of them playing together. But the microphone was moved up 4".

So they are out of phase now in the top octave and they create a huge suck out that is much less output than either of the two drivers playing by themselves.
Now here are the same drivers measured the same way but with the microphone moved up 8".

And now at 12" up from center with the mic.

Now there is cancellation down to 2kHz with dips in three areas. And guys this is just with two drivers.
When you add more drivers then you get a lot of cancellation areas up top and a lot of reduced output while you get more and more coupling and increases in output down low where the wavelengths are long. So you get a lot of bottom end but no highs at all.