You need to make sure the impedance matches or you will blow you amplifier! It would be best to replace it with the same brand as the speakers, feed it with a digital cable. There won't be a problem of overloading your amplifier.
Yes. A loudspeaker is a loudspeaker. The usual considerations apply to both ICE and home HiFi.
Make sure the impedance of the coil is compatible with your amplifier. (Ohms)
Make sure the amplifier cannot deliver more power than the coil can handle. (Power in RMS Watts).
The rest is down to taste and fidelity. (wake the neighbours)
Yes, however you will need an amplifier for the subwoofer that runs on house current. This subwoofer isn't really designed for larger areas like a room. It is tailored for sound inside the trunk of a car.
You can use XM in both your home and your car, but will have to pay a bit more to be able to listen to both at once.
Yes this can work, although if your guitar does not have active pickups you may have to use a pre-amp to get the signal strength up a bit.A word of caution however, do not use a home stereo that you are fond of, and dont go crazy with the volume... you will end up damaging the speakers.
With Subwoofers only, you would want to go with only a 1 channel or 2 channel amp, 5 channel amps are designed to power 4 smaller speakers, and 1 subwoofer. Each channel basically refers to a different speaker - if you're using 2 regular left and right Speakers (not Subwoofers), use 2 channel setting, if you have 4 Speakers plus a subwoofer, use 5 channel setting. Make sure subwoofer is tested with the lowest gain/volume.
'Stereo' meaning 'stereophonic sound ' came into use in the late 1950s, when stereo record players became available. The word 'stereo' had other meanings and was used earlier.
Sure you can. Just wrap it around your car's antenna.
No, this is a passive subwoofer designed for car audio applications. Modern home theatre receivers have no amplifier for the subwoofer and expect a powered sub.
No, this is a passive subwoofer designed for car audio applications. Modern home theatre receivers have no amplifier for the subwoofer and expect a powered sub.
If your home receiver is not rated for a 2-ohm load (many can handle a 4-ohm, but not a 2-ohm), you will damage components inside the amplifier by over-current. Don't use car stereo components in home stereo equipment. It's like using a hockey helmet to ride a motorcycle.
Just listen to the car stereo
No you cannot house amps use 120 volt ac car amps use 12 volt dc
Any subwoofer can work in any car as long as you make the necessary adjustments and modifications to get power and audio cables from the speaker to the deck.
While it is possible it is not wise. There eill be a mismatch of everything from the power to the load and this will ultimately damage the equipment. Most car speakers are meant to run on a different impedence that home speakers.
You must first check with the guide to your subwoofer. Either you can probably find it online , but you need to know the RMS wattage for the subwoofer. Than buy an amp that can put out the same number of watts and the RMS is for the subwoofer.
Yes if you have a dock on the car stereo.
You could. Or you can just by a 100-250 watt AC/DC convertor
It should be okay long as it was made to use in a car.
In my car, i use an auxiliary cable to connect my mp3 player to my car stereo.