Harley Part #76146-04
Fits 98-02 Electra glides and ultra classics.
Should support 4 speakers.
It's a Harley Davidson, Heritage Softtail Classic, with High Ape handle bars.
Your speakers will blow out. A guitar amp is not meant to handle the low register of a bass. Even on a practice amp.
Yes, you are ABLE to do that. SHOULD you do that? Absolutely not! The speakers in a regular guitar amp are not made to handle the low frequencies that a bass guitar produces. Playing a bass through your twin reverb will result in blown speakers, which, given the amp model, WILL NOT BE CHEAP TO REPLACE.
Yes. I've seen this done several times successfully, although the sound quality just isn't the same. Make sure the cab can handle the amount of watts you are using. NEVER run a bass guitar through a guitar amp head or speakers.
Never use any bass with any guitar amp. Guitar amps are not meant to handle the lower register of a bass, and the speakers on your guitar amp will blow out if you try to play a bass through them.
A computer can only handle one set of speakers at a time.
Bass Blocker will not raise the power a speaker can handle. It will keep low frequencies from distorting and damaging smaller speakers that cannot handle low bass.
yes it will, but if you try to turn it up to loudly you may cause damage to the voice coil of your speakers
Which speakers and which moulding exactly are you refering to? If you are talking about the door speakers: Just remove the screws on the panel and inside of the door handle and inside of the armrest on the door there is a screw. Then you must remove the door handle by using a screwdriver to pry off the clip behind the door handle. After that just pop the panel off.
The front is on the handle bar and the rear is on or in line with the brake peddle.
Yes, the speakers (150W) can handle more power than the stereo (140W) can produce. If it were the other way around (stereo more powerful than speakers), that's when you burn out your speakers.
Not unless the speakers are rated at a resistance (ohms) that is incompatible with the amp. Speakers don't generate power, the rating only tells you how much they can handle. So, speakers capable of up to 270 watts, can certainly handle 125 watts. However, if the amp is not 1-ohm stable and the speakers are 1-ohm, you could cause the amp to cut out and overheat depending on the protection mechanism of the amp.
Running all these speakers at the same time might damage the amplifier. There are switchers made to handle this task.
Dealer or local junkyard.
No, amplifiers are able to handle a wide variety of speakers.
Through the top, you need a short handle screwsriver.
Speakers are measured in Ohms not Watts. Watts is the amount of power you will be supplying to the speakers. In my 2009 Corolla the speakers can handle at least 400 Watts as this is what my OEM JBL system is pushing.