That's what I said...
OOOOPS
Wouldn't multi chambered core interfere with flux? I thought that was the whole purpose of good iron with some nickel in the core was to allow the bass below 200hz to flow through without saturation.
There is definitely some confusion here... Since we deal with that stuff a lot, or at least use words like Lundahl, Cinemag, for better understanding the meaning behind, it would be nice to make a little excursion into transformer theory... I'll try to do it as simple as I can.
In the transformer we have many contradictory parameters. In the nutshell, we need to get both, LF and HF extensions, where in order to get good low frequencies we need to have good inductance, i.e. whether lotsa turns, or good core permeability. At first, seems no problem, as we could easily do either. But the catch is... we also need to get a good HF, and here we have two enemies--leakage inductance and capacitance. So the more turns, the more both of those we get. OK, then what about just use higher permeability material (i.e. higher Ni)--no problem, but then... the rule is the higher permeability, the lower saturation point. So in fact, the higher Ni, the more saturation we get in the bass.
For example, if we get for an audio transformer silicone steel as a core our saturation point would be very high, but we also will lack inductance and LF response, as a result... I even don't mention the distortions will be little bit crap.
With high Ni we can go around and by increasing the area of the core (stucking more lams) raise the saturation point, but then we also increase the length of the wire, thus increasing winding resistance and associated losses. In short, there is something to think about

.
Special winding techniques deal with HF extension improvement, where in multichambered windings (as in Oliver's transformers) we divide the bobbin into a few sections and then winde them separately (as opposed to just winding along the whole bobbing's length). It is used to reduce winding capacitance and thus extend HF bandwidth.
Another winding technique called "interleaving", when instead of pri-->sec (like stock 6802 transfomer), we wind it as pri-->sec-->pri (or we could do even pri-sec-pri-sec-pri). This arrangement reduces leakage inductance.
Those both techniques can also be combined together, but it is very time consuming in manufacturing and would mean MUCH more labor, and you cannot do it as a completely automated process we find in the cheap "stock" transformers.
Hopefully it is more clear now and puts some light on the things.
Best, M