As asked, the question cannot be answered.
At 1 volt, 300 Watts = 300 Amps.
At 10 volts, 300 Watts = 30 Amps.
At 100 volts, 300 Watts = 3 Amps.
At 120 volts, 300 Watts = 2.5 Amps.
At 240 volts, 300 Watts = 1.25 Amps.
To calculate the relationship between Amps, Volts and Watts, use the formula:
Watts = Amps * volts
The Power can either be equal to: P=Voltage times current or Voltage times current times power factor.
Three hundred watts is zero amps. You need a third parameter to complete the equation. Amps = Watts/Volts.
25
300
Yes, it can.
Volts * Amps = Watts 12 Volt * 2 amp = 24 Watts
744
600 watts
300
It generates 25 Amps.
300 watts or less.
Yes, it can.
No you will not even get close to 1600 watts from that amp. If you read the spec for the amp they were putting 16-18 volts into the amp to get the claimed wattage. In your car you will be lucky to get 13.5 volts. You will see maybe 350 watts. A good rule when buying amps is a good amp will run about $1.00 a watt. So a $300 amp will be @ 300 or so watts.
They can be as loud, as the amp is not delivering 600 watts. The 10" sub rated at 600 watts is able to withstand more power.
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.
Volts * Amps = Watts 12 Volt * 2 amp = 24 Watts
744
600 watts
Buy a cheap Jensen amp the 250watt 1.
The formula for watts is, Watts = Amps x Volts.