I've used bi-amping for years, first with Arcam alpha9 integrated and power amps, and then with an Arcam AV250 and now an Arcam AV400. The AV receivers have a setting for using the L+R rear channels ( 6&7) for bi-amping. Personally I think it opens up the sound, and I'd have 2 redundant amps in the recievers if I didn't...
The other day I was looking at the Chord Co. website. They have stopped doing bi-wire/bi-amp cable, on the basis that for the same money spent per meter, you'll get a better quality single run cable (frankly seems a bit obvious based on simple £/m). However they do advocate bi-amping (incidently I do use the now discontinued Chord Rumour bi-wire cable), and suggest that there is more coherence to the music if the speakers are wired "diagonally". This means the +ve from one speaker output is connected to the HF speaker input and the -ve from the same speaker output to the LF speaker input, and vice versa. There is no mixing of L&R channels here, it is just the HF and LF for each channel that is wired like this.
I tried it and I thought there was a difference. However, not being an electronics engineer I am not comfortable with one amp being connected across two drivers in this way. I know both L&R channels are amplifying the same signal, and the cross-over is doing the work to seperate HF and LF and although I think things like impeadance vary with frequency so the +ve and -ve will see different profiles (?), I can't articulate why following the recommendation concerns me.
Does anyone understand this better, and can you explain whether there is any affect on the amplifier?
Thanks