do amps get pushed? Normally a 1200 watt amp would need driving with less than 12 watts of audio.
Yes but not very loudly, the two wattages should match.
Yes
YES
Everything Depends on the voltage supply ...... Current flow (Amp) = Watt / Voltage the Current flow will be 1 amp if voltage is 1 V the Current flow will be 0.5 amp if voltage is 2 V the Current flow will be 0.25 amp if voltage is 4 V and so on.......
1 mw = 1000 kw watt = v*a (volt x amp) 1000 watt = 1kw when a machine or device that consumes 1 kw in order to operate does so during 1 hour - then we say 1kwh or 1kw/h. there is no conversion from plain MW to KW/H - the time factor in the MW expression is missing. Hope helps you.
Ohm's law is P=VI for single phase and 1000 watts per KW where P,V,I denote power,voltage,current so KW = amps *110/1000. So 9.1 amps gives ~1 KW If three phase, it is adjusted by the square root of 3.
Some confusion hereKW and KVA are units of power. The ampere is a unit of current. If you divide power by the voltage involved, you can determine the current involved, in amps. Power (watts) = volts x ampsA volt-amp is a watt. (A volt times an amp is a watt.)I=(KVA*1000)/(1.732*V) (Three Phase)AMP=KW/1000*V*PF--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------KW or KVA can be converted to one another but you cannot convert them to amps. You can compute amps by using this formula,KW = I x V x 1.732 x P.F/1000 (Three phase)KVA = I x V x 1.732/1000 (Three phase)
No. One amp is one amp. It does not matter how long you supply that current. You could say that one amp for 100 hours is 360,000 coulombs, but that is not a useful piece of information.Now, if you want to talk about energy, that is a different story, but you need to talk about watts, not amps.One amp is one coulomb per second.One volt is one joule per coulomb.One watt is one joule per second, which is why watts is amps times volts.One watt for 100 hours is 100 watt-hours, or 360,000 joules. Joules is energy. That is useful information.
yea man it will be alright. just dont turn the amp all the way up or u will catch the wires on fire and u really dont wanna do that.
1200 Watt wiring is more than enough for an 800 Watt amp. The rating of the sub doesn't make any difference to the cables. If you want to use the sub to its rated power you should get a bigger amp. If the amp can only give out 800 Watts and the sub can take 1100 Watts then you can put a bigger amp on. It is still going to be loud as with an 800 Watt amp. I have a 300 watt amp with a 1200 Watt sub and people hear me coming.
crutchfield has a wiring diagram for all kinds of configurations, check it out.
yes it can
It depends on the rms of the two cvrs combined. Also if the 1200 watt amp is 1200 watt rated (rms) or 1200 watt peak. Lets say the two kickers have an rms of 600 watt each, and the amp is 1200 watt rms, which it probably isnt but i'll pretend. This set up would work because 600 of the amps watts would be correctly matched with one sub, and the other 600 would go to the other sub.
A #8 conductor is rated at 40 amps. Wattage is the product of amps x volts. As you can see the voltage is needed in this question to answer it. In the electrical trade I have never come across the terminology watt amp. Volt amp, yes.
Yes!!!!! Do not try it unless you want to get to very hurt!!!!!!!!
you just need one, a general rule of thumb is that the wattage on your amp should be double the wattegae on your sub, hence if you have a 1200 watt sub you'll need a 2400 watt amp
It's actually a good idea to have a speaker that can handle higher wattage than the amp can produce.
1000-1200 watt peak amp its rated at 350RMS and breaks at 1200 watts so ether a 500-600RMS should do fine and sound killer
The best way to hook up a single 12 inch dvc to a 1200 watt amp is to use an MTX thunder box.
A 1000 watt output amplifier is a good sized amp. The critical thing here is that the speakers, regardless of size or make must have the same impedance measured in ohms as the amps output. On the back of your amp at the speaker output jacks you should find a printed number with the output impedance 8 ohms is a typical output. But it won't say "8 ohms". It will say 8 followed by the Greek symbol for omega, that symbol that looks like an upside down letter U. This is the symbol for ohms. If you have the manual for the amp, it will be listed in the specification chart. If you are unsure check with the manufacturer to get the correct impedance Then purchase speakers that have the same impedance