4 ohm tap less voltage, less headroom, less NFB. 8 ohm tap more voltage, better headroom, more NFB. 16 ohm tap most voltage, most headroom, most NFB. Early Marshalls have lots of NFB. 27k on the 16R typically. That is where I would set and forget that part for now.
You are trying to cheat physics though. When you get clean headroom you lose volume, when you get volume you lose clean headroom. For a bass the best you might hope for is a lower volume than youd like but it might sound very good. Expectations for 100w and bass might be a little high.
No reason to stop tinkering.