Bi-amp at 140 watt each, or single 200 watt?


Okay, so I got the Mirage OMD-28s (6 ohm), and they are fantastic. Except that they really need more power. I am currently bi-amping them through my Marantz SR7001, and it just isn't enough power at 110 watts for each amp. It was ample for the OMD-15...but not these big boys.

I was thinking about getting the new AV Separates from Marantz, which would allow me to run 140 watts from separate, discrete, amps. But seeing as that is only 30 watts more than what I have now...I'm not sure if that is the best route.

So...here are my questions. If I'm bi-ampng 140 watts, does that equal a 280 watt single amp? Which is better...two 140 watt amps in a bi-amp configuration, or single 200 watts?

Thanks in advance for any help or input. :-)
Mot
manoterror
Tobias,

Thanks for the response. I had no idea that it would take that much power for an increase in volume of 3db. As far as the sound quality goes...it's quite lovely...just not at the output volume I am used to when running the smaller towers. I'm sure it is because of the additional power needed to drive these big boys.

I'm not getting any distortion on peaks or protection mode, as I don't turn the volume up to the max of 18...I only go to 0. But when I want to really crank some Tool or Coheed &Cambria, I think I need more headroom.

I absolutely want more clarity, detail, etc. That is why I was thinking of stepping up to the AV Separates with balanced connections. I'm always open to suggestions. I even thought about 7 Outlaw 2200 mono-blocks, giving me 300 watts at 6 ohm...or 600 bi-amped for the fronts. :-)

Mot
Bi-amping is NOT additive. It's the same power to different drivers.

A single stereo amp will be a better value (without overdue attention to nearly meaningless power ratings) at the same price, or probably much less, than two bi-amped.

This coming from a guy with 3 amps.
" ...I think I need more headroom. "

Well, if you need more headroom then don;t look at higher continius (rms) power. Search amplifiers with highest PEAK POWER (current, voltage and their duration at given distortion level) you can afford.
unless you know for sure that your speakers are optimized for passive biamping, you'd be better off putting all of your money in one amp. The speaker mfg may be able to offer a suggestion here.