This is an interesting question. I bi-amp. There are three ways to do it. First make sure the straps that seperate the high end from the low end are removed. I am assuming each speaker has two sets of input terminals.
The next question you have to ask and you may want to ask Classe is do both power amps have the same gain level? If they are different can they be adjusted?
One way is to bi-amp is to run the smaller of the two power amps for the high end and the larger for the low end. One channel of each amp goes to the high mid-upper terminal on the smaller amp. The same procedure applies for the larger amp. ( The assumption here is that the speakers can be biamped without an electronic crossover.
If the crossover is separate ( I don't think it is on these speakers) is to use an electronic crossover and do the same. The electronic allows one to vary the gain between amps a, change the crossover points and fix small issues.
The third way is to run each amp bridged mono into each speaker. The assumption is that both amps are of equal power and equal gain. If they are not don't do this.
The next question you have to ask and you may want to ask Classe is do both power amps have the same gain level? If they are different can they be adjusted?
One way is to bi-amp is to run the smaller of the two power amps for the high end and the larger for the low end. One channel of each amp goes to the high mid-upper terminal on the smaller amp. The same procedure applies for the larger amp. ( The assumption here is that the speakers can be biamped without an electronic crossover.
If the crossover is separate ( I don't think it is on these speakers) is to use an electronic crossover and do the same. The electronic allows one to vary the gain between amps a, change the crossover points and fix small issues.
The third way is to run each amp bridged mono into each speaker. The assumption is that both amps are of equal power and equal gain. If they are not don't do this.