Seems like you just switch topic. Are you now talking about troubleshooting your power amp that you think was damaged? I thought you just want to see if for yourself that the speaker level input of your BIC sub can be connected to the same amp's binding posts in parallel with your front left/right speakers.
Again, trying to find out what's wrong with your amp is a different story. One would need to know the symptoms, what it is doing and/or not doing, and really should have a copy of the service manual on hand and you have some electrical/electronic knowledge not just a multi meter. Otherwise there isn't much you can do other than checking all connections (if it still makes sound) points, fuses (if not making sound) etc. If not, the best bet is to send it back to the manufacturer for repair especially if it is under warranty.
I think the amp is damaged (the AMP100). The sub part of this is that I think my hooking it up may have damaged it the way it interacted. But maybe not. Looks like probably not based on everything was hooked up right. The sub is behaving fine separate. All components are behaving fine except the amp's right channel, no matter what I hook up to it and with different cables. So I've narrowed it down to the amp (not the sub's amp plate, separate, the amp that was sending high-level output to the speakers and the sub's inputs, the AMP100).
I already had hooked up the sub the way I described. It worked fine. And per the manual the sub is fine. What I don't know is if the AMP100 is fine after enabling both channel A & B and how that works in terms of the load it will see and if I introduced too low of an impedance doing that, harming the AMP100.
Currently the AMP100's right channel is degraded, lower volume, muddy and it wasn't like that the previous day. It only started after I ran the sub off the high-level output from the AMP100 to the sub's high-level inputs on the sub's amp plate for a while. This is why I asked if it was a coincidence or if I had setup something incorrectly and harmed the amp.
This amp is old, and I bought it used, have had it for years. They're $125 new, so I'm not worried about it. I got plenty of my money out of it over the years. It's fine if it's dead. I just wanted to learn something from it, in case I caused its demise, or if it was just "it's time" and it was a coincidence.
So to help clarify:
I started with the AMP100 (50 watt stereo amp) hooked up to bookshelf speakers normally.
The AMP100 has channel A & B to switch between two outputs (both stereo outputs).
I had the bookshelf speakers on channel A.
I then output from channel B on the AMP100 to a sub's amp plate that has high-level inputs.
I then enabled both channel A & channel B simultaneously so that the bookshelf and sub speakers were getting signal from the AMP100 amp.
This was working well, sounded great for a few hours. The next day, I noticed the AMP100's right channel was dim, veiled, muddy. I rotated different speakers to check speakers and rotated different wires. I narrowed it down to the right channel on the AMP100 being much lower volume, dim, muddy, distorted. Figured I damaged something with my connections. Started this thread.
So earlier in this thread, it was noted that the connections were correct and it should have been ok. And so maybe the AMP100's right channel going bad is just a coincidence.
Now, since I am certain the right channel is degraded, I was curious to test it other than listening to it, perhaps with a multi-meter since I have one to see what it's doing, other than the obvious degraded, low signal that it's outputting. I have no plans to repair or fix it, it's old and used, lived it's life well. If it's dead, that's no big deal, I have several of them.
Very best,