Biamping is a perennial topic, and it is usally asked by folks who know very little about it, except it 'sound' (inthier hhead at least) exciting and sophisticated. Biamping is neither of those things.
If you are going to BUY two amps, your are ALWAYS better off getting one better amp.
Ony if you happen to have two amps laying around, and want to play around, then yeah, try it.
And forst off you would divid a 'three way' speaker system by woofer on one, and the combined mid and treble on the other!
Treble portion of the output is miniscule!!
Say you are using 50 watts for the whole speaker, then 40+ of those watt is going to the bass, and 8 watts to the midrange, and less than 1 watt to the tweeter (on average).
Low frequencies use the majority of the power.
If you do a search about biamping, you can see that a few folks (who know what they are doing, get good results, the majority is almost as good to not as good as one better amp.
Save yourself the hassles and buy one good amp.
If you are going to BUY two amps, your are ALWAYS better off getting one better amp.
Ony if you happen to have two amps laying around, and want to play around, then yeah, try it.
And forst off you would divid a 'three way' speaker system by woofer on one, and the combined mid and treble on the other!
Treble portion of the output is miniscule!!
Say you are using 50 watts for the whole speaker, then 40+ of those watt is going to the bass, and 8 watts to the midrange, and less than 1 watt to the tweeter (on average).
Low frequencies use the majority of the power.
If you do a search about biamping, you can see that a few folks (who know what they are doing, get good results, the majority is almost as good to not as good as one better amp.
Save yourself the hassles and buy one good amp.

