If the levels for your kick start clipping before the kick creates its place / volume in the track, you have a frequency problem, meaning your kick level incorporates a multitude of frequencies which just take up space, but are not effective.
The "natural" thing to do would be to boost low end but....... its likely that that's exactly the frequencies which make your track clip.
Stop thinking that a kick is just low end - it is NOT. Analyse the freqencies of some good sounding kicks and you will find one of the widest frequency bands of all instruments.
Therefore, to creat power, volume and sound - without clicking or pushing it - first cancel out the lowest frequencies which are not effective, then creat you midrange kick attack sound, then start adding bottem, carefully. You'll find you will end up with a kick plenty loud and effective, nowhere near clipping level.
I have tried every way of mic'ing kicks possible, but still get the best results from a simple D112, placed just outside the hole.
If the track warrents a super extended low end, like needed for some Hip-Hop tracks, I have made a wire mesh tube the diameter of a kick, about 3' deep. I place this in front of the kick and cover it with a thick down bed cover, then mic this with a U47 or a
U89i.
I never use a seperate mic for atack, instead I normally position a snare bottem mic in a way to cover both snare and kick attack.
After all that - tuning the kick right, and playing it right, is still the best way to good sound.
Finally - opposite to many - I hardly ever use a compressor on the kick ---- if I work with a brilliant drummer. I do use it if the kick is to uneven in velocity.