This varies user to user, but for the best output, a low keying wattage with more forward swing is best. If you drive the amp with a keying wattage of 1 watt, and a forward swing of 20 watts, the amp will perform and the modulation will be loud and strong. Where if you key the amp with 20 watts and swing to 22 watts, the carrier will be extremely powerful but it will not produce that powerful sound like having lots of forward swing does.
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Short Answer: Try to get speakers with an RMS wattage rating roughly equal to the RMS wattage rating of the amplifier (per channel). Further Information: If you amplifier puts out 75 W RMS per channel, get a speaker that can handle 75 W RMS. If you get a speaker that handles 150 W RMS per channel, you will find that the amplifier doesn't have the power to make it sound as good as it could / should. Also, lower frequencies (where the amplifiers wattage rating is put to test) could burn out your amplifier. The opposite is also true. If the speaker can only handle 25 W RMS and you hook it up to a 100W RMS amp the amp might send so much current through the speaker coil that the coil wires heat up, burn off their coating and short together. This, in my opinion, is much less likely to happen though. NOTE: An amplifier doesn't put out its rated wattage all the time. The amount of wattage dissipated by the speaker varies directly and greatly with the music. A flute solo for instance being played with a huge 1000 W RMS amplifier might just put out 20 W RMS during the solo. But when the big organ kicks in jumps to over 900 W RMS.
To much for your mom.
Wattage of a Sanyo Bar Fridge ,please?
1600 watt amp. your power amp should 2x the rms value. To varify, check JBL's website and look in one of their speaker manuals, it will show you their speaker wattage and then show you the recommended power amp wattage.
The wattage rating tells you how much electricity its consuming, most electrical appliances give this information.
You can expect to spend around $200 for an intergrated amplifier.
17kW is 17,000 watts
Wattage is the amount of sound a speaker can pump out. More wattage means the speaker will be louder, but won't necessarily sound better.
A Class T amplifier will typically cost around $20 to $40. The Class T amplifier is a small amplifier that produce a great amount of audio volume for it size.
Different appliances have different wattage draws. Without knowing the wattage of the appliance, an answer can not be given.
The wattage and the output provided are the major differences between these two units.