Somebody please help me understand how a speaker’s crossover works. Suppose a speaker has two pairs of binding posts … one for the highs and one for the lows:
1) if a full range signal was sent to the highs, the built in crossover will filter the lows right?
If yes,
and my purpose is to filter out the lows from a bookshelf speaker, and bi-amp in the process as well:
2) can I do the following but still get the benefit of a signal filtered of <80hz?
Full range going to the subs input, then from the filtered outputs into the LOWS
Full range going to the HIGHS
To keep this simple, let's assume we're talking about 2-way speakers, one woofer and one tweeter, with a passive crossover built into the speaker cabinet. And let's also assume the crossover point is at 2,000 Hz, which is typical for many bookshelf 2-way speakers.
The crossover will have two separate sections in it, a low-pass filter that feeds signal below 2,000 Hz to the woofer, and a high-pass filter that feeds signal above 2,000 Hz to the tweeter.
These crossover sections can be built so both are wired to one set of binding posts, or as in your case to two separate sets. If you use jumper wires to connect one set of posts to the other, it is the same as if you had only one set of posts. Without the jumper wires, one set of posts connects only to the woofer low-pass filter, and the other connects only to the tweeter high-pass filter.
If you want to bi-amp, you will need two amps (or amplifier channels) per speaker. Connect one amp to the lower set of posts, and another to the upper set.
Your first question doesn't make sense to me because the tweeter will never get a full range signal. Most tweeters will be damaged by that.
Your second question also confuses me, but I think you are asking if you can filter out the bass below 80 Hz from your bookshelf speakers, and bi-amp them as well. The answer is YES.
With a HT reciever, you have another optional crossover to use between a subwoofer and your other speakers. This crossover is built into your HT receiver and works upstream from the signal your other speakers get. If you set this crossover to 80 Hz, your subwoofer gets signals 80 Hz and below, and your bookself speakers get signal above 80 Hz. If you bi-amp as well, the bookshelf's woofer gets signals from 80-2,000 Hz, and the tweeter gets signals above 2,000 Hz.
Does that answer your question? Or is your set-up different?