Unless the amplifier has two inputs, you cannot plug more than one instrument in. The two channels are used off of the input to change sound between clean and different distortion types, not for another instrument
This depends on your amplifier's specifications. i would recommend looking in the amplifier's service manual to avoid disapointment or damage to your amplifier or speakers.
This is an amplifier that has 4 sperate channels and can be wired in various ways. Usually you would have 1 channel per speaker so you could do 4 speakers with this. However, sometimes it is possible to join the channels together and get more power out of fewer channels - you can get anything from 2-4 channels out of a 4 channel amp.
if it is 350 rms by 2 channels it is 175 rms each channel unless it can be bridged than its 350 rms by 1 channel
A 2 channel aplifier is an amplifier that can operate two channels. It is basically two 1-channel amplifiers in a single box. This unit is usually intended for operating a left speaker and a right speaker. A channel is the signal/power combination intended for one specific speaker. A 'Stereo' audio system typically has a left channel and a right channel. More advanced audio systems may have separate channels for different types of speakers (midrange, woofer, tweeter, very commonly subwoofer, sometimes supertweeter) or for rear channels (surround.) This sort of setup was modern during the early 90s. A bridged 2 channel amplifier is constructed in such a way that the amplifiers can be set up to operate inline providing the effect of a more powerful one-channel amplifier. If durability is a concern, a bridgeable two channel amplifier used for two channels tends to work well because it's likely to have higher quality or just more diodes so as not to be destroyed too quickly during bridged operation. Using a more powerful amplifier with the gain turned down is also a good idea if longevity is a concern.
It has 2 channels and a plug-in dual-zone piezo sensor.
1.differential amplifier 2.operational amplifier 3.instrumentation amplifier 4.chopper amplifier 5.isolation amplier
I tried and no one would touch it, I pulled it and found that an amp from a 1995 Aerostar was the same right down to the plug. 2 bolt and plug in the harness worked for me.
It could be a 2 channel stereo amplifier.
That is usually an amplifier for 5.1 surround sound signals. Just a little extra info: With 5 channels you'll have 2 for the front left and right, 2 for the rear left and right with 1 being the center channel speaker. Most often seen in home theaters with a sub woofer out but increasingly seen in cars.
That is usually an amplifier for 5.1 surround sound signals. Just a little extra info: With 5 channels you'll have 2 for the front left and right, 2 for the rear left and right with 1 being the center channel speaker. Most often seen in home theaters with a sub woofer out but increasingly seen in cars.
You can record up to 4 channels simultaneously, though the recorder has only 2 microphone preamplifiers. You can, however, use another mixer with it, or just plug your wireless receivers into any of the four inputs (and tweak the sensitivity of th inputs). If necessary, I can run a boom mic on channel 1, a plant mic on channel 2 and then 2 wireless mics on channels 3 & 4. Then the editor can mix all that on discrete channels.
There is a way you can put 4 speakers on 2 channels. You can also put 2 subs on 2 different channels.