Can I bi-amp my speakers with two different amps?


I’m hoping this is an amp question.  Can I bi-amp my Revel F52s with two Mark Levinson power amps? A #331 for the top and a  #335 for the bottom.  How would I make the connections to my preamp?  Any other recommendations?
jokomo
@68pete
Did you really have to type your last sentence?? hehehe

It would be interesting jokomo to share what it does to enhance your overall sound.
Just to save you from blowing something up, be sure the amps are not connected to a common ground at the speaker end. Remove any connection at the speaker that ties the woofer and tweeter terminals together in ANY way. Keep them totally separate. To feed the amps the same signal, just use one of those "Y" connectors that give you two female phono sockets and one phono plug.
boomerbillone
Just to save you from blowing something up, be sure the amps are not connected to a common ground at the speaker end.
Boomer make a good point that could happen to something else, if using linear amp/s for the mids/highs and Class-D for the bass. As many Class-D’s don’t have their negative (black) output at ground potential. Linear's do. 

It may rarely happen but could, if the speaker designer was asleep.

When you remove the speaker bi-amp/bi-wire bridging links at the back of the speaker. Even after removing them make sure with an ohm meter that the two negatives (blacks) are still not connected together inside (meter needs to show open circuit). As if they are you’ll need to break the common trace inside the speaker that connects them on the xover. Otherwise the linear amps black terminal will give ground potential to the black terminal of the Class-D, and BOOM! could happen!

Cheers George