I'm pretty sure I was on the same path you are embarking on. I spent a lot of time trying to figure out working distance trade-offs and then translating those into Amscope product specs. Here is a thread you might find helpful:
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/beginners/the-ergonomics-of-microscope-soldering-direct-optical-view-vs-cameramo-257888/msg3332530/#msg3332530This particular post has a chart attached that will give you the measurements you are looking for:
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/beginners/the-ergonomics-of-microscope-soldering-direct-optical-view-vs-cameramo-257888/msg3332530/#msg3332530Just above the chart you will see a measurement for floor to workbench surface that might help with your planning.
fwiw, you might be a tad taller than me and we might have roughly comparable eye sight (glasses often needed), but I think you will find that with the Amscope 745 and the 0.5 Barlow you will be able to see stuff under the microscope (maybe even without your glasses after you adjust all the scope optics) that will enable you to think that you have nearly Superman eyes.
On a related note, in case not only your eyes but the rest of your body is not in official Superman condition, once you figure out where you want the scope on your bench for working distance and for viewing (in terms of your eye level), make sure your chair / stool can adjust to just the right height to save your neck, shoulders, back, and legs from fatigue/soreness. A properly adjusted sitting stool with a foot rest can be very helpful.
Based on my research and experience, imo, I would forget the articulating boom. If you watch Louis R he notices the sensitivity to jitter caused by even slight bumps on his bench when he shows off his articulating boom; other users have noticed the same.
If you have room for the double arm boom I'd go for that with the caveat that there are lots of reports of users who found that over time the double arm boom and ball bearings used on the Amscope can cause some indents on the arms. My advice is just don't over use the double arm boom; move it gently when you first get it to experiment with your layout, find where the stand settings give you the best layout and then lock it down. If you just push the head back and forth because it's fun you will use up some amount of lifetime on the boom arms. It shouldn't be this way - it's a defect and an opportunity for Amscope to improve the product (and they know about and have had years to address it), but it's worth dealing with because the double arm boom and the overall stand design gives you a LOT of flexibility to position the microscope where you will find it most useful and comfortable. So don't be afraid of it wearing out, just don't over use or abuse it..
I think what you are looking for is something along these lines:
SM-4NTP 7X-45X Simul-Focal Stereo Lockable Zoom Microscope on Dual Arm Boom Stand
SM05 0.5X Barlow Lens For SM Series Stereo Microscopes (which will get you to 3.5X-22.5X)
LED-144B-ZK Ring Light with Adapter
LED-11C Powerful LED Dual Goose-neck Microscope Illuminator Light (you can get by without the independent controls to save on the budget but controlling the lights separately can be useful)
RU050 0.5X C-mount Reduction Lens for MU Series Cameras (depending on your camera decision)
Check out the links above and feel free to ask questions. You are headed down a great path.