It is advertised as a 5,000 watt max amplifier and it is capable of putting out 300 watts rms according to their owners manual but you will never see them advertise it anywhere and that is assuming you are using a 14.4 volt battery which I don't know anyone who has one.
Rms is watts that's the amount of watts a speaker is rated for.
RMS watts is not a real measurement. The correct measurement is "average power", which is measured in "watts". It is dervied from RMS voltage, but that doesn't make it "RMS watts". "RMS watts" would be 22% higher than the correct "average watts".
"Watts RMS" is better represented as "Watts average". Since 1000 watts is 1kw you have "1000 watts average" and you can derive "1Kw average". So 1000 watts RMS will consume 1 Kw
Scroll down to related links and read "Why there is no such thing as 'RMS watts' or 'watts RMS' and never has been".
Scroll down to related links and read "Why there is no such thing as 'RMS watts' or 'watts RMS' and never has been".
The only way to convert watts to PMPO is when you are using watts RMS. With this, the equation is 1 watt RMS is equal to 100 PMPO. PMPO stands for peak music power output.
75 x 1 Watts RMS @ 4 Ohms 150 x 1 Watts RMS @ 2 Ohms
Each speaker is rated at 200 watts rms
500rms
Scroll down to related links and read "Why there is no such thing as 'RMS watts' or 'watts RMS' and never has been".
The lucky number in the case of a watts to rms conversion is .707. If you are converting a single watt, then you would multiply 1 by .707 which will supply you with either the upper or lower end of your RMS range.
Total power output (Total RMS output): 1000 watts