So my calculations for my last brew was:
25L strike (that’s the max with grain I can do in this pot)
Mash
-4L grain absorption loss
=21L
+6L “sparge” (pouring over the bag and then squeezing)
= 27L
Boil
- 8L evaporation
= 19L post boil
- 1L trub
= 18L into fermenter
- 2L fermenter loss
= 16L batch
I really want to be shooting for a 19L+ batch to transfer to corni keg though...
I have faced this exact situation with my 35L kettle. I think you are doing well with your 1L trub loss, could do better with fermenter loss. Remember fermenter loss can be mitigated with a nice big yeast starter - of which more later.
You have a few choices. Simplest is to go Belgian and add sugary water at the end of the boil. Sugar is cheap (to you) and keeping a low percentage will not affect your beer body noticeably. If making a dark beer you can use treacle, which has unfermentables in it, thereby maintaining body. If making a large starter, you can add sugary water via the starter.
The option I've gone for is Maxi-BIAB -
http://www.biabrewer.info/viewtopic.php?t=352
This will change your life! The principle is that you brew a big beer and dilute post boil. I find I can do pretty good calculations with the BIAB.info spreadsheet called The Calculator, even though it's not perfectly suited to this style. A concern often expressed is losing efficiency because of the lower liquor to grist ratio, but with a nice fine grind, I'm getting 90% mash eff with a L:G below 4:1.
Perhaps the trickiest part is getting your bitterness addition right. You have to calculate the IBUs for the full, final, diluted volume, and then bump the hops up some more to account for the lower utilisation achieved in a higher gravity wort boil (don't use a bag or spider - that further lowers utilisation. My next brew looks like needing 120g of Fuggles for 25.4IBU in 44L of 1.043OG wort - that's $12 worth of hops for bittering alone - so I'm planning to try this
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/bittering-hops-in-15-minutes.html where you make a hop tea in the pressure cooker. It takes 10 mins and no cost for the high gravity wort.
I think you're losing too much to boiling. An hour at 4L loss per hour should be plenty.