on my 10" L7s I have a 600 Watt amp on them but iv red 1 sub can take 800 Watts all day an peak out at 1200 for short periods of time.
A 24-inch monitor typically consumes around 25-30 watts of power.
A 27-inch monitor typically consumes around 30-60 watts of power.
To power your speakers, and to ensure that your amp has enough power to power your subwoofers, you would need at least an amp of 750 watts true power.
An LCD TV with a traditional flourescent backlight uses about 110 watts of power. A LED backlit LCD TV uses about 85 watts of power in the 32-inch size.
no it would not because the engines are only turbo ckl's wich are realy slow engines.
Up to 1600 watts amplifier. Less wattage will still power speakers but at a reduced volume level. Wattage is power. If you expect to fill a living room with sound, it would only require about 200-500 watts with good quality speakers. If you want to fill a banquet hall, then you would probably be looking at thousands of watts 2000-10000 watts depending on size of hall.
You stated 30 Watts - that is the power handled. What else could it be?
Depending on the models and features of a 27" television set, the average power consumption is around 100 watts.
It depends on the power handling capability of the speakers. Generally, a 500-600 watt amplifier would be sufficient to power two 15-inch speakers that have a power handling capacity of around 250-300 watts each. Make sure to match the amplifier's power output with the speakers' power handling to avoid damaging the speakers.
The question should be, can the two 15 inch sub-woofers handle 900 Watts? The speakers should have a power rating marked on them. If the speakers can handle 900 Watts, and they are suitably impedance matched with the amplifier, there should not be a problem.
No, 2 inches is the max.
-21-inch Standard TV: 74 watts -42-inch LCD TV: 195 watts -DVD Player: 15 watts -VHS Player: 17 watts -Blu-Ray: 19 watts -Satellite Decoder: 35 watts -Converter Box: 08 watts -Cable Box: 25 watts -42-inch LCD TV: 195 watts -26-inch CRT TV: 74 watts