Either 4 or 8 Ohms. It will be on the back of the speaker.
The speaker impedance does not match the amplifier's specified speaker impedance.
Alan Watts is a famous modern philosopher and speaker. He became famous in the San Francisco Bay Area when hosting a show on KPFA, a Pacifica Radio station located in Berkeley, the home of american journalism.
It depends on the environment, a 2 watt speaker is usually smaller and more portable but a 12.5 watt speaker is louder and usually has better sound quality.
Each speaker is rated at 200 watts rms
In laymen 's terms, yes. But the "Watts" of a speaker is not what the total power of the speaker is. The are usually two different ratings for speakers to determine the total power. One is "RMS", which means root-means square. And the terms "peak or continuose power". A speaker can be 400 Watts, 360 RMS, 390 continuous power. That means it will take an amp at least 400 Watts to drive the speaker properly. And the speaker will perform at 360 Watts RMS, and peak out at 380 Watts continuous power. Remember, u can't blow a speaker from overpowering it. Only from under power. The speaker will distort and sound horrible from overpowering, but it will not blow.
No
Rms is watts that's the amount of watts a speaker is rated for.
it has 400 watts
120watt
One million watts
The Alpine SPS-600 6.5 x 6.75 in. Car Speaker is rated at 240 watts.
It depends on the model speaker. The speaker has an RMS amperage rating used for choosing the amp size needed. You would want to choose the upper number if there is a range. For example 50-200 rms watts, choose an amp with 200 watts. It is worse for the speaker to have too little than too many amps. Crutchfield even recommends 75%-150% of the RMS rating. You will also need to know the OHMs of the speaker when choosing the amp. There are sub woofers rating at 2 and other rated for 4 OHMS and have different amp requirements.