To determine the age of your Laney amp with the serial number Q1B6439, you would typically need to contact Laney directly or consult their documentation, as the serial number format can vary by model and production year. Generally, the first letter indicates the year of manufacture, and the following numbers may indicate the production sequence. If you can find the year associated with "Q," you can estimate the age of your amp.
You can ask Laney through the website linked below.
It should read in the back of the amp.
The plate should as a minimum show the working voltage, volt-amp capability and the rpm of the generator. Other optional information is the manufacturer and serial number.
maybe, if you put it in the right place. to make it as loud as it can be put it high up and facing in the right direction
The amp rating for a number 10 wire is typically around 30 to 35 amps.
Laney Amp RB1 15 watts, Hartke System Amp HD25, 25 watts, Roland Amp CB60XL 60 watts
You'll be able to get a sound out of it for practice, but the tone probably won't be very good. The size of the speaker cone required to produce the bass (12") means it won't really be responsive enough to deal with the higher note on the guitar successfully.I don't THINK it'll damage guitar or amp. It shouldn't damage your bass amp, but if you use a bass with a guitar amp it will pretty much destroy the amp.
You can find the alternator amp rating on the alternator itself. The amp rating will located near the alternator serial number. The rating will be a 2 or 3 digit number followed by an A. You could also find the information in your original owners manual or you could go to your local auto parts store, look at the choices for your vehicle and then visually compare to the one on your motorhome.
normally 10 amp hope this helps
That fuse should be located in the driver's side kick panel remove door with a tug on the small knob on the door it will be fuse number 2=15 amp (tail) number 6=15 amp(stop) or number 7=7.5 amp (turn)
No, the National Electrical Code book (US) limits the current on a #12 AWG to 20 amps.
There isn't a formula, but the general rule is that you allow for 1 amp per outlet and you load the circuit to 80% of maximum. For a 15 Amp circuit you can have a maximum of 12 outlets.