2.0 and 2.1 or even 5.1 regarding speakers means that there are 5 speakers to one output device such as the stereo. 2 speakers coming out of 1 stereo or 5 speakers coming out of one stereo. If you were to talk about 9.2 this would mean that there are 9 speakers but attached to 2 output devices such as a television as well as a stereo. Hope this has cleared up your problem.
What do you mean by that
It can mean that their eyes were looking downward or that they were feeling sad and despondent.
A buddy is a guy that will go out and get him a good looking girl and bring her better looking friend home for you.
Not with any great success ... but certainly no more successful than if one used normal audio speakers to amplify a guitar. The two are not interchangeable ... I mean, it will work kinda sorta but won't have the greatest tonal sound.
The white and red is your constant (yellow), the 4 blue wires are front speakers the four green wires are rear speakers, the red wire is your ground, and the blue wire on that plug is your 12v ignition wire.
64 watts = 18.1 decibels. If by 'set' you mean you have two 64 watt speakers then they will create 36.2 decibels.
PMPO stands for Peak Music Power Output. Its is one of many ways of rating the output capacity of speakers.
200Wx4 means you have 200 watts times 4 channels. Meaning you can get 200 watt speakers for the four corners of your car and the radio you have that has 200Wx4 will power them equally
Okay, it depends upon what you mean by "tiny". All surround sound speakers should be matched up with a subwoofer. If you have surround speakers that read a wattage rating as 100 watts, that is what they will produce, but don't expect them to thump out a lot of bass. I have a 7.1 home theater with Klipsch surround sound speakers, they are rated at 200 watts apiece and do produce a small amount of bass, but I also have them teamed up with a 500 watt subwoofer and the whole entire system sounds great!
RMS is basically the amount of watts that the stereo can continuously dish out and the peak is like the most watts it can give out but only in bursts. And the the amount of channels is how many speakers it can give power too. So basically you can continuously give out 20 watts to each speaker if you have four hooked up to the thing.
The watts means nothing without the voltage.
Since the equation for watts is: Volts * Amps = Watts that would mean 12 Volts * 1 Amp = 12 Watts
It can mean loudspeaker.
2.0 = 2 speakers 2.1= 2 speakers with a woofer
It just means that the speakers are built into the unit, rather than separate speakers that you rig up to it.
most hairdryers on low use about 402 watts, and on high about 1440!!!
i think you mean a 1991 sunbird since they didnt start the sunfire until around the mid-late 90's. but in any case, unless it has the monsoon package is around 15 watts rms. there isn't an actual posted rating, however this in kind of a standard in the auto world for factory speakers.