Thanks for the replies so far.
If I consider before/after active bi-amping, what strikes me as the difference is essentially removing the crossover from the speaker. While obviously there's some lower limit to feasibility (as with the tweeter example in my OP), I'd imagine the choice riding on the crossover network rather than the size of the woofers.
On the other hand, I recognize that (as a general rule) larger drivers may require more power and crossover parts that may be more lossy.
Is this the reasoning, it would you care to elaborate or point me to something (I'm not lazy, don't mind reading on my own, just don't know where to look for more on that)?
Precisely the question on my mind, and also why I imagine some hybrid like bi-amping or tri-amping if at all.
But the specs for these speakers are oddly misguided. For example there are two sets of specs, both on JBLs letterhead, where the sensitivity and crossover points vary.
In addition, a printed review I now can't (re)find suggested desparity between the specs and reality, and measured as low as 2-point-something ohms impedance. I believe he quoted a sensitivity if 86 dB.
While I haven't yet measured these myself, I'll suggest that the sensitivity is not 91 dB and the old Harman Kardon AVR630 they are temporarily hooked up to seems to "run out of tap" much sooner than other speakers I have had hooked up to it.
But whether the "fix" for this and the best sound quality barring the point if diminishing returns is through one or more amps per speaker, I really can't tell.
I don't know of any other way to do active bi-amping, so I thought it was pretty much implicit in "active bi-amping"? (Asking if I'm overlooking an alternative)
Your link doesn't work for me, but I know the crossover network schematic.
If not doing full quad amping, which seems excessive to me, but rather some "hybrid bi-amping ", I wouldn't have to recreate the entire network sonically though, "just" fx the "handoff"/crossover points to where the crossover takes over.
For now, just trying to establish what might be considered "worthwhile" sonically.