It depends on the rms of the two cvrs combined. Also if the 1200 watt amp is 1200 watt rated (rms) or 1200 watt peak. Lets say the two kickers have an rms of 600 watt each, and the amp is 1200 watt rms, which it probably isnt but i'll pretend. This set up would work because 600 of the amps watts would be correctly matched with one sub, and the other 600 would go to the other sub.
yes it can
Anything up to 1200watts
A 100 watt light bulb does not cost more that a 1200 watt hair dryer. The average price of a light bulb is about 90 cents whereas a hair dryer can range up to 20 dollars.
10 Amps. Amps=Watts/Volts
It depends on the rms of the two cvrs combined. Also if the 1200 watt amp is 1200 watt rated (rms) or 1200 watt peak. Lets say the two kickers have an rms of 600 watt each, and the amp is 1200 watt rms, which it probably isnt but i'll pretend. This set up would work because 600 of the amps watts would be correctly matched with one sub, and the other 600 would go to the other sub.
yes it can
A 1200 watt resistive load hair dryer is equivalent to 1.2 kw (kilowatts).
Yes!!!!! Do not try it unless you want to get to very hurt!!!!!!!!
very hot but not quite as hot as the 2000 watt
800 watt should be fine
you just need one, a general rule of thumb is that the wattage on your amp should be double the wattegae on your sub, hence if you have a 1200 watt sub you'll need a 2400 watt amp
1200 Watt wiring is more than enough for an 800 Watt amp. The rating of the sub doesn't make any difference to the cables. If you want to use the sub to its rated power you should get a bigger amp. If the amp can only give out 800 Watts and the sub can take 1100 Watts then you can put a bigger amp on. It is still going to be loud as with an 800 Watt amp. I have a 300 watt amp with a 1200 Watt sub and people hear me coming.
Anything up to 1200watts
do amps get pushed? Normally a 1200 watt amp would need driving with less than 12 watts of audio.
Technically, yes. Practically, no. Amplifiers and speakers are rated by the maximum amount of power (and at what impedance) they can handle. A 1200 watt amplifier will eventually destroy a 1000 watt speaker if it is operated at maximum power. In normal use, however, you rarely even get close to maximum rating.
crutchfield has a wiring diagram for all kinds of configurations, check it out.