50 watt equals less than 1/2 amp current flow at 120 volts so you can have 30 light on a 15amp breaker or 40 on a twenty amp breaker.
a 220 volt, 3200 watt oven will draw under 15 amps, so yes a 2o amp breaker will work.
about 4800 watt but should not use it 100% so to be safe 4000 watt (80%)
The formula to use is I = W/E, assuming that the single breaker is delivering 120 volts, the amperage to the circuit is 16.6 amps. A continuous load on a 20 amp breaker has to be reduced to 80% according to the electrical code. 20 x .8 = 16. So to answer the question, yes, a 20 amp breaker will support a 2000 watt load at 120 volts.
As long as the voltages match a 60 amp service will handle a 700 watt microwave. The microwave will only draw A = W/V, A = 700/120 = 5.8 amps.
yes it will
Not if subs are rated for 2000 watts each.
it depends on alot, alot of things. but id say to be safe a 2000 watt. but the best amp would be a sundown saz1500d
I have 2 q power 1500 watt subs and a 3500 watt proacoustic amp and it pushes it well although not enough so im sure you need more than 2000 watt to push 3 of them.
$250
i found one for 65.00 new
You'd blow out the light.
Most of the time they are sold for about 49.99 new
if the sub can handle it yes....say if u have a 2000 watt amp 2 channel and u have a 2000 watt DVC sub then it will work but wouldn't advise doing that for great sound qulity
1200 Watt wiring is more than enough for an 800 Watt amp. The rating of the sub doesn't make any difference to the cables. If you want to use the sub to its rated power you should get a bigger amp. If the amp can only give out 800 Watts and the sub can take 1100 Watts then you can put a bigger amp on. It is still going to be loud as with an 800 Watt amp. I have a 300 watt amp with a 1200 Watt sub and people hear me coming.
48 lbs
Would be compared to 1200 watt amp