What do you gain from bi-amping Magnepan 1.6s or


OK, I am going to sound naive but I admit I am - simply trying to gain knowledge.
Does bi-amping mean you use one amp for each speaker and if so why? I guess this is what mono-blocks are for and I thought it was a simple case of wiring one amp to one speaker but I read a post on here where a guy was asking if it was possible to bi-amp Magnepan 1-6s and the answers seemed very technical (issues relating to crossovers etc). Anyway, I have a pair of 1.6s and I have use of Parasound JC1s but don't want to damage anything. If I decided to how would I go about this and what have I got to gain. I currently run the 1.6s with a Pass 250.5.
thomastrouble
Thomas,with all due respect,due to the problem you had figuring out how to connect your speakers in a previous post,I sure would not be worrying about this right now.
With all due respect, should I not ask questions to gain knowledge? I am new to all this as you know but are you suggesting I should ask only the most basic of questions and stay at that point?
Using a mono amp on each speaker is no different that using a stereo amp. The speaker connection is the same. Bi-amping requires two amplifiers per speaker (one connected to the low and one connected to the high speaker inputs). You may or may not need an external crossover depending on the particular installation and whether or not all four amps are identical.
Hi Narrod. I see, I always thought a mono amp on each speaker was bi-amping. Four amps then, wow. For all the reading and internet googling I have been doing I missed that. OK, here is a list - what do I actually gain moving up the list:

(1) A stereo amp

(2) Two mono amps (one for each speaker)

(3)Bi-amped (two mono amps for each speaker)

Lets say these were all good quality amps of the same brand, what is the advantage of moving through the list (and the added expense) and is there a great increase in sound quality?