Random thoughts:
- I'd try plugging this all up somewhere else first, and see what you like and what you don't. I've bi-amped before, and it can be confusing inasmuch as you may hear lots of the high pass, and not so much low pass, depending on the room. Or vice-versa.
-Over the years, I've grown to think bi-amping with bass cabinets (ALL of which were designed as 'stand-alone' bins, not designed for two- or three-way operation as PA bins are) is maybe a crapshoot to begin with. In the old days we did it, as there were so few good cabs and high-powered amps, no longer a consideration. Having said that, I can think of no one that builds a 'system' of bass cabs designed for two or three-way operation.
-Then there's the consideration of that 'Gordian Knot' of all the control on a Series axe, plus the SuperFilter (and BTW, there's the F1X along the signal path, with crossover). All of that Q and gain, I instantly understand why Jimmy plays direct and has his positions marked ! Amazingly, when I biamped, I'd set a neutral tone and jack the high pass for more treble, jack the low end for more bass, and never touched the tone controls.
-The 'classic' Alembic stereo idea was each pickup thru its own channel in the F2B, broken out to each side of a stereo power amp into separate cabs. These days you could also go into a chorus or delay, to feed the two channels to get that swirl across the two, the same thing the Jazz Chorus does internally.
-Then past all that, you're really only doing this for your stage sound: After that, it's off into the house thru the Mains, where, hey, it's bi- or tri-amped depending on the setup, and any 'stereo' or 'chorus' effects would be applied.
I'm reaching for Tylenol just thinking this thru . . . Good Luck !
Joey