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If I buy a 400 watt power supply will I get high electricity bills?
I currently have an 250 power supply ( PSU) but I am going to change to an 450 Watt PSU . If i do will I get higher bills .
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It looks like there is no good way to do that. From what I can tell the system you have does not have a powered subwoofer so there is probably just a speaker hook up on the back to hook the woofer up to. Since this is already 50 watts coming out it would not be safe to hook that into a powered subwoofer. You will either have to get a new receiver or use the factory sub.
all that you would have to do is run power from the one amp to the other and then get the other audio cables to it then run the speaker wire to the amp and it should work…that how i have mine hooked up in my jeep
http://www.elecdesign.com/Files/29/3378/Figure_01.gifandhttp://www.elecdesign.com/Articles/Index.cfm?AD=1&ArticleID=3378Do *not* open-circuit a current transformer. It can damage itself with high voltage, and be dangerous to anyone doing it.
You can always use one thats overrated to your hardware, its only when its underrated that the parts wont work properly. Think of the PSU rating as a “max” power draw it can handle; its not going to send more juice through your board than your board is trying to draw.
It makes sense to upgrade ONLY when it is an UPGRADE. Changing one mediocre component for the other will not make any difference. If you want to improve the base in your system – get a BETTER sub. Good subs are pretty expensive – $300 and up for a half decent one form HSU.Using two subs? How about 2 centers or 4 fronts?If you just want more BOOM – put your sub in a corner, and you will get more BOOM. Not more base – just more BOOM.
I assume they’re on your computer, the two important ones are as follows: Continuous: A hypothetical steady volume during a song or program, the highest steady volume during that song or program.Peak: the point in a song when all hell breaks loose with cymbals and drums or others jumping much louder than the steady volume, Or when gunshots or cannons go off during a movie, etc.Neither specs are much to worry about in your situation because the low level output from your computer is fairly constant, and powered speakers are designed not to blow their own speakers. Tweeters are more easily damaged by peaks, but most powered systems don.t have them.Hope that helps, luck to ‘ya