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It will have the potential to over drive the speaker elements and can cause distortion and potential speaker damage.
the speaker will be pushed past its farthest flex point and it will eventually start tearing the actual speaker and will break
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.
MWe stands for Mega Watt Electric, representing the output electric power of a power plant. Contrast this with MWt, which is Mega Watt Thermal, representing the thermal output power of the boiler, be it nuclear or fossil.
24 watts.The more watts, the clearer and more powerful the system.
No.
45 watt output to each of four speaker connections
Absolutely!! If you turn up the gain too much, the speakers will smoke. You can use it at a lower level
The difference is in the output frequency.
A 14 watt LED will give you the equal output of a 50 watt halogen.
It will have the potential to over drive the speaker elements and can cause distortion and potential speaker damage.
You can, but the problem is your speakers will not give their optimal sound quality because your Amplifier is too weak for the speakers. So,buy an amplifier with an output power rating high then 400w.
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.
tv on the radio
Yes, but not to full effect.
I think this question answers itself. If a speaker produces 112 db at 1 watt and measured at 1 meter distance, then obviously 1 watt is needed to produce 112db at 1 meter.
watt rating of a speaker is max power it can handle without getting damaged. it will produce proportionate amount of sound for less power from amp., even for 1 watt.The power output ratings for most amplifiers are very misleading. That number,i.e.,1000 watt , is under one certain type of condition for 1 second. Usually the frequency of 1khz for 1 second. The true output under actual operating conditions 20hz-20Khz is probably closer to 100 actual watts of music power or sound reproduction power. The same with the speaker rating,,,the power rated is at the same conditions Max power @ certain frequency @ certain amount of time.Safest bet,,,,,always use a larger rated speaker for an amplifier. If you have a 200 watt amp,,,use a speaker rated a minimum of 200 watts,,,,400 is better.