Want this question answered?
Subwoofers are loud speakers used for the purpose of reproducing low frequencies (10Hz - 150Hz). They use large magnets to move a firm cone in order to produce the frequencies. A current is passed through the magnet causing the cone to move producing bass. Subwoofers in cars and in home theatre systems use amplifiers to boost electrical power to provide large amounts of the deep notes. I have 2 15" Kicker CVR subwoofers, custom box, 1200W RMS Audison Amplifier. Hope that helps
1200W is the either the MAXIMUM power that a passive subwoofer (driver only) can HANDLE or the power rating of the amplifier on an active subwoofer (amp built-in). If passive, you can use pretty much any amplifier as long as it's 1200W or under. You can even use an amp that is > 1200W -- you just can't push it past 1200W or you risk damaging your sub. The relative loudness at a given dial on the volume knob is dependent on the sensitivity of the sub (measured in dB). Also bear in mind that power varies with resistance so an amp that pushes 1200W @ 4 ohm will not be able to deliver 1200W to an 8 ohm speaker -- often times it can only deliver 1/2 the power (i.e. 600W @ 8 ohm in this case). If active, well the sub already has an amp so you just need to feed it a line-level or speaker-level signal. Either way if you're talking about your car or home I guarantee you won't be pushing ANYWHERE near 1200W -- that's window-shattering, deafening loud. Just to put things into perspective, I use an amp that's rated at 10 W into 8 ohms and never turn the volume dial past 1 or 2 o'clock, which means the amp is never delivering more than maybe 6 or 7 watts. If you can get remotely close to 1200W that means the amp is so inefficient that it'll probably be melting and/or burning down your house/car at that point.
dont get the pioneer its junk i blew mine in 5 minutes on a cheap bazooka 300 watt mono amp
1200w
on the internet
10a
Bags made for any canister vacuums will work with the Shark Plus Euro-Pro 1200W. Check out the related link below for an example of these bags.
Depending on the RMS power of your sub, and size and brand of your sub, it will depend. If you have a single sub, I'd recommend a monoblock amp that puts out close to or enough to power your sub. You could also use a 2 channel bridgeable amp, as they are generally a much cheaper option. For dual subs, I'd say a bridgeable 4 channel amp, or high-output 2ch amp. To give an exact amp, I don't go past the Pioneer GM-d8500M 1200w Class-D Monoblock amp.
1200W on 10g cable would not be reccomended.. You will most likely have problems with the amp not getting enough power and shutting itself down.. At 1200W you would most likely be looking at 4g or bigger.
no it will not and do not try that i almost got electrocuted from it
i have a 97 Concorde so its pretty much the same. all you do is pop off the casing around the stereo, undo the bolts take it out, buy a wire harness and a deck kit, and wala it is simple as that...i put a pioneer DVD indash in mine with 2 sony xplod 12's and a 1200w amp with a capacitor
1200w 100w