You have not understood my post. When you remove the straps from your speaker terminals, the top terminals connect to your high pass filter which just supplies the tweeter, which I believe in your speakers is crossed over at 4 KHz. At those frequencies your tweeter will take less than a watt of power. So if you biamped with your receiver your would add at the most two watts of power!
Take a look at this
crossover circuit. This is for a 2.5 way speaker like yours, but a different circuit for different drivers.
Now if you passively biamped the speaker when you remove the straps, you break the connection between C1 and the positive terminal of the lower terminal block. The upper positive terminal would the connect to C1.
Likewise the lower negative terminal connection is broken to L1 and the upper negative terminal connects to L1.
So using you receiver to passively biamp those speakers is not even worth the cost of the wire.
Now if you wanted to use an active crossover, you would actually require three amps per speaker, (three, 2 channel amps). The internal passive crossovers would be removed. The active crossovers would be connected to the amps inputs, and the amps directly connected to the correct drivers.
The active crossover would require the same electrical slopes and cut offs as the passive crossovers they replaced.
I hope you understand now, and anyone else thinking about biamping.