i think is 1100 watts at peak volume,people put way more than in there cars these days,it does have a 40 amp fuse, and the stereo runs off the battery and the amps are fused there,so that power does not go through the cars harness i was mistaken when i wrote about that,but i am glad to have some in put on this subject because i am wondering how that power is measured,obviously it cant be more than 40 amps,so that answers that a little,electrical is not new to me its just confusing
I'm not quite sure what fancy math companies use to make their power figures sound so good.
I have a 600 Watt amp in my trunk to run my 2 rear 6X9 4-way speakers. When I read all the fine print and stuff, this amp is actually quite tame by today's standards. It worked out to be 100 Watts per channel. It came with a 30 amp fuse. I ran the power from my starter relay, so it isn't going thru the car's originally wiring either. Here's the kicker....After I wired it up, the amp wouldn't come on.
It turns out the 30 amp fuse was dead in the water.
I could not for the life of me find a 30 amp fuse of that physical size locally, so I went with the highest rated fuse I could find in that big size...15 amps. You know what, 5 years later, that 15 amp fuse has never blown.
Keep in mind, it has to be turned up loud to hear things over the exhaust on the high way, so I think this fuse is another thing they over rate.