In most cases, the speakers should be able to handle more watts than the amp can deliver. Doing it the other way around will blow out the speakers.
YES! it won't reach it's peak, but that's also probably a good thing, cause it'll be harder to blow your sub. i prefer to buy either the exact watt match for my subs and amp, or buy the next lower watt amp from my subs
depending on your amps rms, i wouldnt suggest it.
yes say you have a 10" kicker sub that needs 250 watts to hit and you have a 1000 watt kicker amp you have to much power going into that sub so it will hit harder. BUT if you but more subs and your amp has a few channels you can send the right amount of power to the subs without risking damage. i have 2 12"kickers with a 1000 watt amp so i have to much power but my subs sound amazing so do what you want most subs are $80-180 HAVE FUN
+- 250 watt to 500 watt
250 milliwatts
yes, but a 251 watt works better
100mph
1300 what? inches? metres? microns?
250
100mph
$250
In a sense it would, say that 1000 watt amp was a mono channel. that would mean its 1000 watts RMS @ 1-0hm, 2 RF p3 4ohm would make it 500 watts to the two. if you want full power you need a 1200 watt amp @ 1-ohm, that would make it 600 watts to the 2 and that is the RMS of those subs. you can run more but running above RMS can blow or distort the subs.