HI guys. This is for a home system, not for a car.
BDgregory-- you wire the high and low frequencies of the speakers separately, in series. Do you know how to wire in series? If not, let me tell you how to do it when bi-amping: Use one amp for the left signal/speaker, and one amp for the right signal/speaker. Now, one speaker at a time: send channel A red on the amp to, for example, the red speaker post of the LOW FREQUENCY on one speaker; send channel A black to the LOW FREQUNCY black speaker post on the other speaker. Now, connect the black speaker LF post from the first speaker to the red speaker LF post on the second speaker. Now you have an "in series vertical bi-amp" of the low frequencies on two speakers. Do the same for the high frequency speaker posts and you will bi-amped two speakers in series. Continue the same process for another two speakers with the other amp (right signal) and you will have a stereo system playing four speakers bi-amped in series. I did it today with Snell Eii and Snell Jii with two Yamaha P1600 amps (230W/channel @ 4ohms). I've decided I prefer the Jii alone, vertically bi-amped. So, I'm selling my Snell Eii. If anyone has some advice on the subject, please feel free to drop some pointers my way, if you think I can get the Eii and Jii to run in series and be bi-amped AND sound "correct."
The vertical bi-amping has made a tremendous difference in sound quality. I also built my own speaker stands out of 80 lb chunks of 30 year old oak trees from my Mom's backyard. They work awesome!
BDgregory-- you wire the high and low frequencies of the speakers separately, in series. Do you know how to wire in series? If not, let me tell you how to do it when bi-amping: Use one amp for the left signal/speaker, and one amp for the right signal/speaker. Now, one speaker at a time: send channel A red on the amp to, for example, the red speaker post of the LOW FREQUENCY on one speaker; send channel A black to the LOW FREQUNCY black speaker post on the other speaker. Now, connect the black speaker LF post from the first speaker to the red speaker LF post on the second speaker. Now you have an "in series vertical bi-amp" of the low frequencies on two speakers. Do the same for the high frequency speaker posts and you will bi-amped two speakers in series. Continue the same process for another two speakers with the other amp (right signal) and you will have a stereo system playing four speakers bi-amped in series. I did it today with Snell Eii and Snell Jii with two Yamaha P1600 amps (230W/channel @ 4ohms). I've decided I prefer the Jii alone, vertically bi-amped. So, I'm selling my Snell Eii. If anyone has some advice on the subject, please feel free to drop some pointers my way, if you think I can get the Eii and Jii to run in series and be bi-amped AND sound "correct."
The vertical bi-amping has made a tremendous difference in sound quality. I also built my own speaker stands out of 80 lb chunks of 30 year old oak trees from my Mom's backyard. They work awesome!