Hello Nik,
First, to be sure it's clear, "higher sensitivity" = a lower sensitivity number, assuming that sensitivity in each case is defined as the input voltage required to drive the amp to its maximum rated power.
Second, per my earlier comments you don't necessarily need higher sensitivity. What you need is higher gain (assuming the amp provides a volume control). Assuming that the low frequency amp will be considerably more powerful than your present 8W amp, having higher sensitivity (defined as the input voltage required to drive the amp to its max rated power) would also assure that the higher powered amp has higher gain. However, you would be unnecessarily limiting your choice of amplification by choosing based on sensitivity rather than gain. Perhaps severely limiting it.
Finally, I suspect that any McIntosh amp you might choose would be far more powerful than your present 8W amp. If you were to passively biamp such a combo (i.e., without a crossover "ahead" of the amps), using the Mc's volume control to gain match, as I indicated earlier you would not be able to turn the preamp's volume control up high enough to utilize most the the Mc's power capability without driving the 8W amp into clipping, resulting in severe distortion.
Although passive biamping (i.e., with no crossover ahead of the amps) relieves the high frequency amp of having to supply current and power at low frequencies, it does not relieve that amp of having to output voltages corresponding to the full frequency range of the signal, including the deep bass content. Your 8W amp would almost certainly not be capable of outputting nearly as much voltage as a much more powerful McIntosh. So you would be paying for a lot of watts in the Mc that you wouldn't be able to use, and that would not increase the overall power capability of your system as much as you might expect.
Best regards,
-- Al