no you dont
There are a couple of options. you can buy a 2 chanel with 400W rms per chanel, or a mono at 800w. make sure you match the ohms of you speakers with you amp. If your amp is 800w rms at 2ohm, it's 400w rms at 4 ohms. So if your speakers are 4 ohms, they wouldn't be getting the power they need. And remember you can blow speakers by under powering them, but not by over powering them.
There are two types of subwoofers. 1. Active subwoofers 2. Passive subwoofers An active subwoofer will have a built-in amplifier. A passive subwoofer doesn't have a built-in amplifier which will require the use of an amplifier, the use of a power source.
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.
Find out what the rms is for that sub woofer,if it'1000 then find out what the max is,then you could go between the rms power and the max power to get the right amount of watts.
To power three 600-watt subwoofers, you would need a minimum of 1,800 watts, as each sub requires 600 watts. However, it's advisable to have a little extra headroom in your amplifier to ensure optimal performance and avoid distortion. A power supply of around 2,200 to 2,500 watts would be ideal to accommodate any peaks and ensure the system operates efficiently.
Memphis Street Refrence 1.500 best amp for the subs
To wire a Rockford Fosgate T500.2 amplifier to a 2 ohm load, you will need to connect two 4 ohm subwoofers in parallel. Each subwoofer's positive terminal should be connected to the amplifier's positive output terminal, and each subwoofer's negative terminal should be connected to the amplifier's negative output terminal. This will create a 2 ohm load for the amplifier. Be sure to verify the amplifier's minimum impedance requirements to ensure proper operation.
This is determined by how you wire your subs to your amp. If you get an amp that's bridgeable to mono, then you can wire your subs in series. You will get much more thump if you do it this way. However, make certain that your amp is bridgeable, and stable down to 2 or even 1 Ohms. Check with the dealer you buy from. When wired the way I mentioned, a 300-Watt amp will probably do nicely!
no, a factory CD player can be used in a vehicle that has subwoofers attached. as long as the factory CD player in the vehicle has treble, bass, and subwoofer controls on it, it will be fine. if not, an aftermarket CD player will be the solution. with subwoofers, you need to control the amount of power that are ran through them. the amplifier is a control, but if not set correctly on the CD player, you could blow your subwoofers.
It takes 1 farad for every 1000 watts so u need 2 farads.
A Rockford 250 watt amp would compliment a 12" Subwoofer very nicely.
Most power amplifiers will handle a load of 6 ohms. The spec you need to look at is the power handling of the speakers. If they are rated for 100 watts program power, then look for an amplifier rated for 100 watts RMS output. Any amplifier can be connected with adapter cables to the typical 1/8" output of your computer.
that's impossible, unless you want to hook it straight up to the radio, which is possible but you will only be getting 50 watts into a subwooer that usually has around 250-1000 watts so it will barely have any to no excursion, the reason why people have amps is because it has more wattage then a regular stereo..but you don't want to have a too big of a amp because that will blow your subwoofers, so you need to find a amp that is suitable for your subwoofers