Marakanetz: I've read your post three times and I think you had things backwards or confused.
If you were running the speakers with the jumpers on you were not bi-wiring. (even if you were using Bi-Wire cables). The use of the jumpers negates any benefits, and makes your speakers the same as non-biwire speakers.
Now you are running separate single wires without using the jumpers in the binding posts. This is exactly what bi-wiring is.
If this is correct, then you may unknowingly believe bi-wiring helps.
Bi-Wire speaker cables are just combined in a single package as opposed to running separate cables to the speakers. This is called single bi-wire cables. Double Bi-wire is running separate cables for the top and bottom. Some companies make special bi-wire cables that are double the single cable in one jacket (MIT, Analysis Plus Bi-Oval, Nordost and others); These cables cost more that the single version, because there is more cable. Many use different size conductors for the top and bottom very much like you mention using using different single cables.
Other companies separate the mulitple conductors in their regular single cable version into four conductors at the speaker end (AudioQuest, Straightwire, Blue Circle, many others). These cables only cost a little more than the single version (more spade or banana terminations needed). One system of mine has double Audioquest even though a single cable can be made into a biwire. This is more costly because you need twice as much cable. For the regular single version audioquest uses the larger gauge cables for the bottom and the smaller gauge for the top.