"Watts RMS" is better represented as "Watts average". Since 1000 watts is 1kw you have "1000 watts average" and you can derive "1Kw average". So 1000 watts RMS will consume 1 Kw
Total power output (Total RMS output): 1000 watts
Total power output (Total RMS output): 1000 watts
Rms is watts that's the amount of watts a speaker is rated for.
Scroll down to related links and read "Why there is no such thing as 'RMS watts' or 'watts RMS' and never has been".
RMS watts is not a real measurement. The correct measurement is "average power", which is measured in "watts". It is dervied from RMS voltage, but that doesn't make it "RMS watts". "RMS watts" would be 22% higher than the correct "average watts".
75 x 1 Watts RMS @ 4 Ohms 150 x 1 Watts RMS @ 2 Ohms
Find out what the rms is for that sub woofer,if it'1000 then find out what the max is,then you could go between the rms power and the max power to get the right amount of watts.
1 watt RMS equals to 100PMPO , accordingly 1000watt RMS equals to 10,000 PMPO. check out LG Home Theater HB954TB for the same.
1000 watts rms should be plenty
Scroll down to related links and read "Why there is no such thing as 'RMS watts' or 'watts RMS' and never has been".
In a sense it would, say that 1000 watt amp was a mono channel. that would mean its 1000 watts RMS @ 1-0hm, 2 RF p3 4ohm would make it 500 watts to the two. if you want full power you need a 1200 watt amp @ 1-ohm, that would make it 600 watts to the 2 and that is the RMS of those subs. you can run more but running above RMS can blow or distort the subs.