You can. Just don't have the gain turned up all the way and listen for distortion from the subwoofer. After you hook the amp up, turn the gain all the way down, turn the stereo up as loud as you can. At the point where the regular speakers start to distort, turn the volume down just to the point that the music is clear then slowly turn the gain up on the amp just to the point that the sub starts to distort then turn it down to the point it sounds clear with no distortion and you just balanced your system. You should never have a problem or hurt your sub.
You will most likely blow your sub
Yes, are we talking rms or max? If its rms you will have no problem. well the amp is a 1500 watt max but 350wx1 rms in 4 ohm
200 RMS 4 channel or 2 channel so u know add the rms of the speakers to find the amp rms needed
since u have two I would say 400 or 500 rms apm
biggest u can afford!
nope your powering it just right
an amp with 300 or less rms wattage output and 1000 or less peak wattage output.
a 500 watt sub woofer puts out 250 RMS a 500 watt amp puts out the same and if you want a good setup get a sub with RMS and a amp with 1200 max so 600 RMS will be powering the same 500 RMS sub woofer then you can tune it to push the sub woofer a bit and the sub woofer should take it I recommend ether mono single channel 2 channel brands go name brand if u want support later or go no name to be different
the subs rms tells you what u need.. so a 900 watt rms sub would be best with an amp from 800-1000 watts
1 watt RMS equals to 100PMPO , accordingly 1000watt RMS equals to 10,000 PMPO. check out LG Home Theater HB954TB for the same.
300 watts or less.
Yes, a 1200 watt amp can provide good bass for 2 Kicker CVR 12-inch subwoofers. Make sure to set the amp gain correctly, match the impedance of the subwoofers with the amp, and use a proper enclosure for optimal performance.