How do you bi-amp with tubes and solid state


I am thinking of picking up a BAT tube amp to run my Aerial 10t's along with my Krell KSA-300s! My preamp is a Krell KRC-3! My question is if there is any way to adjust the gain on the amps or if this is even necessary when bi-amping? I just worry about one amp being louder than the other and making the sound unmatched! My only experience with this was in car audio! I would just use an electronic crossover to handle it! Any advice would be appreciated! Thank you, Troy
128x128boisehomes
VTL Huh....Never heard one before! How do they compare to Audio Research and BAT? The prices on them second hand look reasonable and they seem to have high power! I really want to try tubes on my high end! The lows on my system are outstanding!
Faced with a similar situation I purchased a Solid State amp with gain controls. I purchased a Yamaha MX1000. I have owned a number of SS amps some at much higher cost and in my opinion the Yamaha is better than any I have heard so far. A real steal at what they go for. I have it paired with a $5000 tube amp if that gives you any indication how much I like what it does in my system.
The VTL's are good amps. Some people will like the audio research better so on and so on. Those VTL 450's will smoke. When you Biamp your going to run into other problems like level matching and there will be a area where both amps overlap that might stick out pretty good.... Depends what your after, sounds like may want staggering lows with pristine tube like highs, good luck!
The Aerials already HAVE a passive x-over -- you don't need to add an extra, electronic one. Unless you're ready to disconnect the passive LOW pass and the BANDPASS and keep only the tweet's xover; in which case a simple line-level passive or active x-over will do the trick.

The sound will be invariably better when you connect the amps directly to the spkrs with the xover being before the amps (it's easier to xover a small signal). I'm sure Aerial will help you in with info on their xover.

Sound level: it's a matter of amp sensitivity level and in some amps it can be controlled inside. It shouldn't be difficult to find out: check out each amp's sensitivity, the manufacturers could easily tell you!

Good luck