Are amp. makers defrauding us?

 

New member
Username: Mkafridi

Post Number: 1
Registered: Jun-12
Yar lets suppose an amplifier is 1000 watt peak and it has a fuse of 50 amp!

How is this possible??

50x14.4 = 720 watts

http://www.crutchfield.com/S-NYuiq1f...ml#details-tab

This amp has max power equal to 800 watts but has a fuse equal to 40 amp as: 40x14.4 = 576 watts
 

Gold Member
Username: Joe1234

Post Number: 1543
Registered: May-09
Look for CEA-2006 certified amplifiers, also disregard any power ratings but RMS power. This is an old, old issue in the car audio industry.
 

Platinum Member
Username: Glasswolf

Columbia, South Carolina America

Post Number: 14706
Registered: Dec-03
No, the amp makers are not defrauding you.
You need to understand how a fuse works, to understand how to compare fuse ratings with power capabilities.
A 50A fuse doesn't blow the instant it sees 50A. A fuse is designed to handle a specified amount of current beyond it's rating, for a specified amount of time. As the amount of over-current increases, the duration decreases.

Also, a peak power rating on an amplifier is a momentary rating, and nearly meaningless, but if you're going to compare fuse rating to peak power output of the amp, you need to find out what the amp's fuse is rated to handle for a time period of, say, a tenth of a second, instead of 10 or 15 seconds.

Pay mroe attention to CEA2006, or RMS power specs, and not "peak" "PMPO" nd "music power" ratings.
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