A word about bi-amping from receivers. In my experience, not every receiver will "bi-amp" in the same way. Some receivers will output the same signal on both bi-amp outputs. However, some other receivers will do a weird signal comparison. They will output full signal on the lower normal right/left. It will then take the actual used signal from the speaker wire and run it through an op amp comparator circuit to remove those "used" frequencies from the main signal and then send the difference to the "hi bi-amp" output. In this case, you lose massive resolution and sound quality.
In the end, I'm never a fan of bi-amping because the amp will generally use a shared power supply anyways. There are other considerations to keep in mind, such as the weird comparator circuits or having to use a Y-splitter cable which can affect signal quality due to input impedance of your amp. You are better off just getting a really good high quality amp and run the channels full-range. You can always use bi-wire speaker wire if the awg is large enough. That is usually a benefit.
In the end, I'm never a fan of bi-amping because the amp will generally use a shared power supply anyways. There are other considerations to keep in mind, such as the weird comparator circuits or having to use a Y-splitter cable which can affect signal quality due to input impedance of your amp. You are better off just getting a really good high quality amp and run the channels full-range. You can always use bi-wire speaker wire if the awg is large enough. That is usually a benefit.