0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 1320 times.
if they're wired like my Super Towers only the tweeter and supertweeter will be driven by the HF amp, Hardly worth doing IMHO. The passive crossovers cannot be split or changed w/o ruining them. In short I thought about biamping mine and came to the conclusion there was little to nothing to be gained.
Many VMPS speakers have a switch to allow biamping. The crossover is already split at the switch. Just use both sets of terminals with your two amps and put the switch in the right position. It is not the same as active in that passives do waste some of the power from the amp. That said, the only reason to biamp when you have that much power on tap is to change the sound. I know you from Carversite I think. I have a Sunfire Signature 625 x 2 that has two kinds of output taps. One set for low output impedance and woofer control and one set at one ohm output impedance like a tube amp for that tubelike sound. I have two way planars that I use with both sets. I run the big planar transducers with the tubey taps and the woofers on the slam taps.
Yes, I'm on thecarversite as well, and asked the same question.My plan was to horizontal biamp (using the switch on the back and the two terminals) and use two identical amps (a PM1.5a and a PM1200). I am doing this primarily to get more power, but I'm using the two amps instead of buying one amp that is more powerful only because I already have the two amps.But, it looks like the switched biamp crossover puts the mids and woofers together on one circuit, and the tweeters and supertweeters on the other. So, it doesn't really spit the power requirments anywhere close to 50/50. But, I still have the two amps, so, I'll still do it.
I am doing this primarily to get more power, but I'm using the two amps instead of buying one amp that is more powerful only because I already have the two amps.