
It is a complicated layout. 5 inductors on one board is a lot.
I am a fan of using multiple boards when needed. In this case, my preference would be to remove the large iron core inductor from the board and mount it just above or below one of the lower horizontal supports. It could be mounted to the support itself or to the side wall. With that iron core removed you have a little more space for the remaining inductors and components.
With this many inductors on board, the least amount of harm is done by laying down additional inductors.
There is sufficient published testing data to support this, but since that's not the topic of this discussion I wont go too far into the weeds on it. Basically, the drift of value from two laying down inductors, even if only 3 inches apart, with magnetic fields pointing upwards and parallel, is completely insignificant and less than manufacturer variance from part to part. The potential drift of value from standing inductors oriented with magnetic fields intersecting can easily be greater. If you are forced into possible conflict by too many inductors in a tight space, than laying down additional inductors is the safest option.
In my photo above, you will see that 3 of the 4 coils are laying down in the corners, as far from each other as possible. The only potential conflict there, but still minimal, is between the iron-core and the standing inductor. If that iron-core was removed to a different location, there would be no potential negative interactions.
Elon
Ezeecrossovers@gmail.com