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I would say from your description that the tweeters are blown.
Can you take the speaker that sounds good and swap it out with one that sounds bad. If you do that and the good one still sounds good. You have a tweeter problem. And they would need to be replaced.
What you need to do is connect a 1.5 volt battery to the speaker(s) terminals for a split second. Put your ear to the tweeter at the same time (you might someone to help you do this). If the tweeter "pops" it works, if not you might have blown them. The best way would (to be certain) is to remove the tweeter from the crossover inside the unit.
Tweeters are the first thing to go when the speaker has been connected to an amp that is wrong for them or they have been run at high volume.
get an Ohmmeter, take a reading on each speaker line one at a time, on both A & B speaker lines. You should get a reading of 8+/- ohms. The speaker switch with the 6 spks will probably read almost 0 ohms when all 6 are running. That is what your amp is not liking. Try running it with one set of speakers on the switch,with the Tannoys on ch A on your amp and the switch on B. add one pair of the 6 at a time and you'll see that it won't like all 6 at once. 2, maybe 4, at a time is probably what you'll find to work. Good Luck.
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