Does impedance of a speaker change when one bi-amps?


I'm fairly new to the audiophile arena and i have seen this question asked before, but not answered.
rickytickytwo
Post removed 
Assuming the crossover is split, yes.

So in a typical two way the tweeter impedance will go to infinity in the bass,
and the opposite in the woofer. The impedance will rise to infinity in the treble.

Of course, that "infinity" may be at 1 Hz and 1 MHz, so in the actual audible range you'll never hit it, but 30-100 Ohms maximums are not impossible.

If you want to play with this, using a crossover simulator like XSim and designing a very basic crossover will help you see what is going on.

Best,
E
Beside the advantage of a bi-amped speaker presenting an impedance of less variation to each of the two power amps than one amp sees from a non-bi-amped speaker, the speaker’s drivers are also connected directly to the amps, not to the speaker’s internal crossover components. Bi-amping is usually (and best) done with an external electronic x/o before the two amps.