Thanks for your input, I knew A'holics would be able to give some good guidance.
One thing I want to make sure I understand clearly though:
You mentioned that the speakers will drop impedance to 4 ohms, is this because of the bridged power from the MA 500's?
The B&W specs have the 805S at 8 ohms, so I don't understand what it means when you mention they will "drop" to 4 ohms.
Actually they drop to
3.7 ohms.
This issue has to be driven home again and again in these forums.
A speaker load is not like a resistor, and is a reactive load. So impedance varies with frequency. There is a tendency for impedance to rise with frequency.
However the big hooker is diffraction, or step loss compensation. This occurs from the frequency loss due to the narrow baffle, which for your speakers will be a 6 db per octave roll off starting about 600 Hz. Now this is compensated for in the crossover. However all compensation schemes involve dropping the impedance, to allow the amp to deliver the increased power to correct the 6db/ octave first order loss. So for every 3db boost double the amp power is required.
Now the acoustic spl power divide is 400 Hz. But the power delivered to a diffraction compensated speaker involves at a minimum 2/3 of the power delivered below 400 Hz.
So most of the power will be delivered into a four ohm load or less. There will be two tuning peaks of impedance related to the box tuning, but otherwise impedance will fall in the lower octaves.
Now speaker manufacturers average the impedance curve with frequency, but not the power curve. This creates the useless nominal impedance spec, to make you buy the speaker, because far too many amps don't perform well into 4 ohm loads or less, and in actuality, in most receivers, the power delivered to most speakers is half what is rated.
The bottom line, is that assume any decent modern speaker is actually four ohms or less and you won't go far wrong.
The situation is actually worse than I stated, because in inductive loads, voltage and current are out of phase. So the current required is much higher than ohms law would suggest based on phase angles, which few manufacturers publish.
I'm not a fan of bridged amps. I have seen too many disasters. The other problem is that the two channels have to be tweaked to be absolutely identical. This is because one amp is providing the +ve part of the wave form and the other the-ve. So this is a classic push pull arrangement. Any small difference between the amps result in heinous crossover distortion.
So except for some sub applications I steer people away from bridging.