Typically a poor ground, or some how the red wire is touching the black
something is wired up wrong or you overloaded the amp
yes...yes it is
AMP stands for alarm monitoring protection.
The number on a car fuse refers to the Ampage of that fuse , each electrical component on any car has its own or shared fuse with a certain Amp rating, they are normally colour coded too and are to be replaced with one of the same Amp rating for protection.
This is to prevent damage. You may have something not connected correctly or parts that are not compatible.
All car speakers will go well with a 500 Watt amp, but for the best effect, get a power subwoofer.
because when you drive theair is pushing on your car and goes inside the car and goes warm and heats up as you go
They are just protection from overpowering your amp. So if your amp has 2 fuses that say '20A', it can handle essentially 40 amps. So 14.4(V) x 40(A), they allow your amp to draw 576 Watts before they blow. 14.4(V) is considering your car is running and the alternator is good and strong.
you dont
You have the gains set too high on the amp.
The amp is damaged internally, the power is loose, the ground is loose, the control wire from the deck is loose.
The car stereo amp on a 1994 Lincoln town car Is in the trunk, right side behind the seat