And, get yourself some speaker protection!
Well quite honestly getting those speakers up and running would be a huge undertaking, and in my view not worth the expense and trouble.
Here is the Stereophile review from 2009.
In essence we have a speaker that should have been fully active with its own amps.
Instead we have a speaker that needs a preamp and two power amps, which should be identical.
There is an active crossover/equalizer between the preamp and the two power amps. This unit also connects to the accelerometer on the 12" woofer. The woofer has a long voice coil and large xmax. The woofer enclosure is small and the servo system provides massive Eq. So the bass unit is a power hog. You can see from the impedance curve that the woofer enclosure is NOT braced, or not properly anyway, as it rings like a barrel.
Now the mid and HF units are planar types, with the rear radiation adsorbed.
Now the crossover between woofer and mid is nominally 150 Hz, however you can see considerable overlap between the woofer and mid. I suspect this is because the woofer is at least providing the baffle step loss compensation, and may be more than that.
Now for reasons not explained this equalizer and speaker system are highly sensitive to phase differences in the LF and HF amps, such that not getting this right can result in amp and speaker destruction. It would seem to me that badly mastered source material with an inadvertent phase inversion in the 150 to 300 Hz range could also bring about the same catastrophe.
It is note worthy that both woofers fried, and so both left and right power amps failed at the same time. It is almost certain in my view the speaker system blew up the amp and not the other way around. So that equalizer is probably no good now and would need very careful checking out.
I did note that this system reacted very badly to the variable bias circuits of Krell amps.
So to get these speakers up and running the current woofers and crossover equalizer would have to be ditched. A long throw 12" woofer able to take lots of power and with a large xmax would be required. It would require the correct T/S parameters to go down to 30 Hz in that enclosure with Eq The woofer cabinet needs bracing.
A new active crossover equalizer would have to be designed and put together. It certainly is possible that this could be done with mini DSP and REW.
However, I strongly suspect that this is well beyond the capabilities of the OP. So he would have to ship these 150 lb speakers to someone willing to take on the task. This would be very expensive. There is no guarantee the OP would like the speakers when he got them back!
I think the best advice to give the OP is to start speaker shopping.