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It is the cable capacitance. The designer of that amp does not believe in using output inductors. He feels that he has sufficient phase margin that the amp is unconditionally stable. (You can go over to one of the hobbyist forums and look for his rantings if you don't believe me. I know the guy, so I know how he feels.)
Get some standard speaker cables. And don't let people mod your gear. (Well, maybe me, but I am not in the mod business..............!) Not all are competent.
The problem is with the amplifier design.
Speaker wires have both capacitance and inductance but they cannot have both at the same time at the same frequency.
The answer is related to the characteristic impedance of your speaker wire.If the load impedance is higher than the characteristic impedance of your speaker wire then your speaker wire will be capacitive.If the load impedance is lower than the characteristic impedance of your speaker wire then your speaker wire will be inductive.This situation will change with frequency (load impedance and the wires characteristic impedance).Essentially when you connect the low frequency section by itself you then have no load upon the speaker wire at high frequency (high impedance).Because the high frequency load upon the speaker wire is a very high impedance the speaker wire loads the amplifier with capacitance at high frequency.With the mid/hi section connected to the speaker wires the high frequency load upon the speaker wire is below it's characteristic impedance and instead of adding capacitance the speaker wire adds inductance.
A good web site: http://www.audioholics.com/reviews/cables/speaker-cable-reviews-faceoff-2/speaker-cable-reviews-faceoff-2-page-7I would like to point something out: I can't find in the study what frequency they were testing the cables at to derive their inductance and capacitance. I assume it's 1khz. I also couldn't locate the amount of cable being tested, to be exact. It's either 1 meter measurments or 1 foot measurements.
Essentially when you connect the low frequency section by itself you then have no load upon the speaker wire at high frequency (high impedance).Because the high frequency load upon the speaker wire is a very high impedance the speaker wire loads the amplifier with capacitance at high frequency.
What is really happening is the fact that a capacitive load slows down the output stage. This causes the feedback signal to arrive late at the summing node. This causes the negative feedback to go positive, causing high frequency signal peaking at best, and full bore instability at the worst. The instability (ultra high frequency oscillations) generate excess heat in the output stage. The amp in question is obviously well designed to protect itself, a lesser amp often will simply melt down under this condition.