Well if the speakers can be bi-amped then yes. Bi-Amping (which I do with my speakers) allows seperate amplifiers to power seperate components of the speaker. For example. one amp would power the low fequencies(woofers) the secondary amp would power the midrange/highs. (mid and tweeters) This can product significant quality improvements and stability. You simply have to make sure the speaker has a total of 4 terminals (or more) on the back. If so, simply remove the jumper pins and run speaker wire to each terminal.
If your speakers can not be bi-amped, you would have to purchase a switcher in order to run each amp on one pair, but only one amp at a time.
2006-08-14 06:16:31
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answer #1
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answered by JP 4
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One more possibility to add to JP's response if each amp is mono bridgeable and are the same then you could run each speaker with one amp in mono. Not many home amplifiers are mono bridgeable, though many pro and concert event type amplifiers are.
2006-08-14 17:38:58
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answer #2
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answered by hogie0101 4
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JP is right, unless you are going to have the sames info coming from both amps, then you can just hook both up, the speaker will just see it as getting twice as much power, otherwise NO.
2006-08-14 08:57:02
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answer #3
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answered by Alex H 3
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The above answers are all correct, whatever you do do not connect amplifier ooutputs in parallel!
2006-08-14 19:03:05
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answer #4
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answered by gp4rts 7
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Why would you want to do that?
2006-08-14 05:27:20
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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