It will say mono if its only 1 channel which is a sub amp only.
No that would be a 2 channel amp. 1 speaker per channel. 2 speakers= 2 channels 4 speakers= 4 channels
If you bridge a 2 channel 4 channel ect. you are taking the power from both channels as if it was a single channel amp.
Yes you can burn a channel on an amp. Which is do to a overload. Like a 2 ohm load on an amp that is not 2 ohm stable. Will burn out a channel or both channels.
You can connect a sub and speakers to one amp, depending on how many channels your amp has. A 4 channel amp will be able to run one (or two) subs using two channels (one bridged* sub or two subs) and two speakers running one channel each. A 2 channel amp will run 2 speakers or one bridged sub. A 6 channel amp will run one bridged sub (or two subs), 2 front speakers and 2 rear speakers. In my opinion, you will get the most performance, depending on which amps you use, by using a monoblock amp for your sub and an amp with enough channels to run all of your speakers. # Bridged = putting together the power of two channels to run one sub or speaker. Note: not all amps are bridgeable.
A two channel amp, in simple terms, means that it amplifies two different inputs channels (left and right usually, or could be front/rear), and outputs them into two different channels. Other types of amps you may run across is a one channel amp, which again amplifies one signal or channel.
dont know -------------------------------- EDIT: 2 Channel if really what its sounds like, 2 channels which means you have a Left + Right basically. 4 Channels is for 4 channels which like in a car would be Front Left + Right and Rear Left + Right. Reminder!!! Check RMS NOT max Power!!! -TheRamMan-
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.
500 and 27 watts
Yes depending on how many channels the amp has. You usually want to place each speaker on its own channel. If this amp has at least three channels, the output of the used channels would be 1500 watts / 3 = 500 watts per speaker.
u can bridge it to 2 channels not one to make it a mono block
Typically, guitar amps have a clean and overdrive channel. Selecting different channels will allow you to adjust different equalizers and pre-amplifiers, delivering different sounds.
There is a way you can put 4 speakers on 2 channels. You can also put 2 subs on 2 different channels.