yes it is i am running a 2500w and it is fine.
Farad
farad is the unit for capacitance in SI system. If one volt is developed as one coulomb charge is placed then capacitance has to be one farad. But one farad is enormous large one so practically speaking we use only micro farad, nano farad and pico farad. They are respectively 10-6 F, 10-9 F and 10-12 F
I have heard as a rule of thumb that you need 1 farad per 1000 watts, again that's just a rule of thumb and I'm no expert. Seems like overkill to power a 600W sub with that though, you might not need more than a 1 farad since the sub won't be able to handle much more than that
u should be good w a 3 Farad Cap, but did u do an apgrade called "Big3" and then, i might wanna get a bigger alternator, and a 2nd/new battery
A Farad is the electrical unit of capacitance. Many commonly used capacitors (also known as condensors) are measured in micro-Farads (μF). A micro-Farad is one millionth of a Farad. To convert from micro-Farads to Farads, divide the micro-Farad value by one million. 2 micro-farads = 0.000002 Farads.
The Watt hour efficiency is the ratio of the amount of energy available during the discharge of an accumulator to the amount of energy put in during charge.
K=(voltmeter range*ammeter range*power factor)/wattmeter range
about 500 uF
The Farad is a measure of how much electric charge is accumulated on the capacitor. Named after Michael Faraday
The SI unit of capacitance is the farad. 1 farad is 1 coulomb per volt.
Farad is the basic unit for capacitance. The MFD is an abbreviation for microfarad, which is one-millionth of a farad. The capacitance of a 50 MFD capacitor is one 50 millionth of a farad.