So I take it you really don't understand where or how a bass trap is used. Am I right in assuming that? What a bass trap will do is make the inside of your room sound better by lessening room modes. What that means is... You use bass traps mainly in 90 degree corners. When sound is bouncing around your room it's either going to like the shape of your room, or dislike it. Your goal is to make the sound dislike the shape of your room, because when it likes your room it's going to find out exactly what frequencies will bounce around the easiest and then those frequencies will be louder than the rest. That's called a mode. The hardest of all the frequencies to stop from bouncing around and pissing you off like this is the lower frequencies because they're much longer than high frequencies. And the place the low frequencies are going to love the most and create modes is in the corners. So, what does this mean? It means that when you put your bass trap in the corner it's going to do it's best to make the low frequencies hate that corner, and hopefully in the end you won't have a room mode that supports that frequency.
What does this do for you? Say you're listening to the bass player from your control room. Say you're trying to mix his bass into the rest of the music. You're listening, and adjusting his volume, and it sounds great. Then you take it to your car, start listening, and the first thing you say is "Where's the bass?!" The reason you don't hear the bass is because when you were listening in your control room it had a room mode that made those bass frequencies seem louder than they really were. So when you using your ears and adjusting the volume of the bass you were turning it down, and more than you should have. If you had bass traps, and other foam to help, you would have been able to mix it properly.
The same goes for the room that you're micing the bass. If you're running direct ignore this... If the room that the bass amp is in has no bass traps, the room is going to color the sound. And when you mic the amp, you're going to be micing more than just the sound coming out of the speaker, you're going to be picking up those spikes in the volume created by the room.
Just remember, you're more or less trying to take the room out of the equation.
Later,
-Brian