Looks fine, not that it means much but I wonder why it dropped precipitously at around 22 Hz and still have no idea why you need to bump the bass level (trim level?) up by 12 dB. I could even understand 6 dB to get that tilt, but 12 dB seems more than necessary that still indicate without that there would be the unexplainable low shelf that should not be there in your large room and very capable subwoofers.
Regardless, assuming smoothing is not more than 1/12, you now have a fantastically "flat" and smooth response from 20 to 200 Hz that are not seen too often without post calibration tweaks. The fact is, that +12 dB works good for you, what causes it is only important for crazy people like me, who would not stop until I found the cause(s).
My only slight concern is that without knowing how much boost Audyssey might have done at some points within that range, the pre out (ie the subouts) may be in the clipping zone at times, as preamp voltage of a 12 dB extra gain means the voltage will quadruple. If it is at say 1 V level without the boost, with 12 dB boost it would reach 4 V. That's find, but at higher listening level when you get a 20 dB peak, you could be talking upwards of 8 or even 16 V (XLR outputs) depending on the gain of your power amps. Having said that, humans are much less sensitive to very high distortion levels in the below 200 Hz range.
What's REW showing for distortions?
An random example I picked from my sweep inventory, that's a sweep at low level, I imagined it would have been worst if I had cranked the volume up.
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