Monoblocks vs Vertical bi-amping vs Horizontal bia


In attemps to raise the sonic bar of my system, I'm considering my options which includes using a single stereo amp, mono blocks, or 2 stereo amps in either a vertical or horizontal biamped configuration.

Q1: Who out there has experience in how each of the above scenarios differs from one another. If you read Dennis Had's article on vertical biamping at his Cary web site, you'd think that that is the way to go but how does this differ from monoblocks which accomplish the same thing (i.e. one amp used per channel for all frequencies)?

Q2: In which situations do the various amp scenarios best lend themselves (room size, listening levels, speaker sensitivity and ohm rating etc. etc.)?

Thanks for your input.

Kevinzoe
kevinzoe

Showing 1 response by chucker

Hifiho, there is a little confusion here. Vertical Bi-amping is:
The left amp drives the left speaker, period. Its output stages are split between the speakers high freq. input and the low freq. input.

Horizontal biamping is:
one amps output stages are driving the low freq. on both speakers, the other amp is driving the high freq. on both speakers.

And the active and passive stuff gets way detailed.

chucker