Aleph 5 passive vertical bi-amping?


Does anybody have any experience of vertical bi-amping with the Pass Aleph 5? I'm wondering if its worth a try, assuming I can get hold of another Aleph 5 of course!
jabali_hunter
Speakers are Sonus Faber Grand Piano floorstanders. They are rated up to 200 watts, so I don't think there would be a problem there. Was hoping to get some extra benefits of using the 2 amps, ratehr than having to worry about tuning crossovers to start with?
Well, you'd be doubling the power (that's +3db /side). But how do you propose to do that -- unless you disconnect the woofer from the internal xover & introduce an outboard low pass. Asaik, they don't have double binding posts (i.e. "biwire"). Cheers
My GPs are the original mk1 with the bi-wire posts. Therefore I was just planning to use one channel for bass and one for treble, keeping the internal crossovers. At the moment my preamp would need Y adapters (XLR) to separate the signal to the 2 amps, unless I go for a preamp with 2 sets of outputs to enable bi-amping. I've never done this before, so I hope I haven't overlooked anything! Thought it would be an interesting experiment that should yield some benefits to make it worthwhile?
Try driving the bass with any old ss amp at hand (with sufficient output)and check out the result -- before you actually buy an Aleph. Your pre would have to be capable of driving a more difficult load (two paralleled amps). I expect there wouldn;t be a problem.
The advantages of vertical bi-amping are that each amps power supply only has to drive the bass on one speaker. You will experience greater volume and dynamics, with a more effortless musical presentation. And used Aleph amps are reasonably priced.

On the other hand horizontal bi-amping, like one reply states, still requires the that the amp driving both channels of low frequencies still puts a greater demand on that amps power supply. This defeats the advantaqges. Anyway, for sonic balance both amps should be identical.