Most factory speakers are any any where from 10 - 25 watts RMS. I wouldn't put factory speakers on an amp unless you want to blow them.
Speakers are measured in Ohms not Watts. Watts is the amount of power you will be supplying to the speakers. In my 2009 Corolla the speakers can handle at least 400 Watts as this is what my OEM JBL system is pushing.
Usually theyre pretty weak, as low as 6W, 10W to 20W for factory.
2001 police interceptor original speakers are the same size 25 watts 2. 1 inside each front doors and 2 located in the rear, if you want to add bigger specially in the back you might need to cut the hole, but be sure it will fit, inside the trunk is a a couple metal bars, good luck,
No they don't.
The power rating of speakers has nothing specific to do with ohms. look at the Watts rating printed somewhere on the speakers
If you have a newer car factory stereo or a a deck you purchased it alone should have enough power to power those. Depending on how much watts the speakers are.
The output power of home theater speakers can vary by a significant amount depending on which speakers are owned. It can range from 30 watts to 150 watts.
im by no means an expert but the answer is yes you just wont get full potential out of the speakers. the amp is pushing 700 watts the speakers are capable of catching 1000 watts.
That depends on what speakers or headphones the 6 watts is playing into. Watts is a measure of power, not of loudness.
The ratings for the speakers will depend upon what '300 watts' means. If the amplifier develops 300 watts RMS total across 4 channels, this would indicate 75 watts RMS per channel. Speakers rated at 100 watts should suffice for this amplifier.
Max watts
12 watts