No the power supply is too small.
No, you need at least a 1.5 amp power pack.
No. They use a different power supply. The ends are different, too.
The only use of an SCR in a powersupply regulator that I know of is a Crowbar protection circuit to force the breaker to pop if the regulation fails and the powersupply output voltage rises too high.
No, 1 amp is 1000 milliamp your power supply will only deliver 600 milliamp or .6 of an amp.
im by no means an expert but the answer is yes you just wont get full potential out of the speakers. the amp is pushing 700 watts the speakers are capable of catching 1000 watts.
No, a router bit is specifically designed for use with a router, not a drill, in woodworking projects.
No, router bits are specifically designed for use with a router, not a drill, in woodworking projects.
Yes, you can use a 2.0 amps power supply for a 1.0 amps router. The higher amp rating means the power supply can provide more current than the router needs, which is fine. Just ensure the voltage output of the power supply matches the router's requirements to prevent damage.
No router eigrp <AS #> No router ospf <process ID> No router bgp <AS #> No router rip
On a cisco router you would go into privilege-exec mode (enable) and then into "configure terminal" mode. From there you can use the router rip command.
sure you can, your amp will only deliver 52 watts to the speaker, more importend would be the impedance of the speaker . it should be equal to what your amp has! may be 8 ohms
Yes, you can use a 15 amp outlet on a 20 amp circuit. The outlet's amp rating should not exceed the circuit's amp rating.