Out of box answers is the speaker will accept bi amping if there is a socket on the back accepting two kings of signals high/mediums & low/mediums. If not then the speaker has it's own internal cross over curcuit and will do sound division on it own. to bi amp a speaker with out internal crossover you need two amps and an external crossover unit which will allow you to split the sound as mentioned above. then you must wire your hook ups accordingly making sure each speaker and horn gets a corrisponding signal ie... never send low sounds to the horns and vise a versa. if you really got deeper questions check out peavey.com or Yamaha sells a great sound manuel.
1000W will be suitable. See the specifications of speaker.
A PA system is intended for a certain frequency range, same with a guitar amp and bass amp. Bass amps for example are made to handle a lower frequncey range so plugging a bass into a guitar amp can damage the speaker because the guitar amp cannot handle to lows of the bass. The same is for a PA system. To properly play through a PA system it is better to mic a guitar amp and then run the mic through the PA. The mic will limit the frequencies of the guitar allowing the PA to handle it better. Most live venues will do this so bringing a Marshall full stack isn't neccesary. Even a small 50watt amp would work fine in a live setting as long as it is miced.
I would not advise this, because the guitar speakers are designed to make a guitar sound good, and PA speakers are designed to make vocals sound good. PA speakers, electrically, are low impedence speakers, while guitar amp speakers, electrically, are high impedence speakers.
You are not guarenteed to get a great sound, but typically it is possible. A combo amp is just a cabinet and pre-amp/power-amp(head) in one box. If your combo has a line out that you can use to run speaker wire to the back of your speaker cabinet, then most likely it will work. The issue is, will your amp have enough juice to run the speaker cabinets with enough volume? For instance, my head is running 750w into a 4x12 at 4ohms. If were to run a 100w combo power-amp into the signal then I would likely have break up of signal and loss of sound clarity trying to get enough volume to be effective. If your combo has tons of extra juce, however, go for it!
You can either run a patch cord from the "line out" jack on back of your amp to the board (or head of the snake, if your band has a snake for the PA). If your amp doesn't have a line out jack, you can place a mic in front of your amp, and plug it in to your board.
the sub woofer will not put the max sound out that its recommended my guess it will blow the fuse or damage the speaker. the amp well i recommend you not to text that out the hard way, but let somebody have the skills to hook them up right!
First, the 2 ch amp has to be bridgeable. In the "Pro Audio" world, PA, Sound System etc... some amps are easier to bridge then others. The easy amps are the one that have "Binding Post" for speaker output (the post you wrap wire around and screw it down or use banana plugs) to bridge these all you do is connect your speakers to both positive(+) post ( use both of the "red" post). This will add(bridge) the power from both sides of your amp and send it to your speakers. The subwoofers should be in parallel with each other,(the "in" from one speaker plugged into the "out" of the other). be aware that this will lower the speaker impedance making the amp able to send a higher wattage to the speakers.
You can troubleshoot problems with your pa system speaker by restarting the electricity source. www.homerecordingconnection.com has good information too. You will fist need to determine if you have power to the PA system. If you have power but no sound,make sure all connections are secure, and correct.
Absolutely. A guitar amp is designed to amplify the guitar and related frequencies and as a consequence, sounds nice with guitar. Vocals through a guitar amp sounds bad most the time, as does guitar straight into PA speakers.
1996-98
OTVORI PA CES VIDJETI!!!!!!!!!!!!
It depends on what kind of PA system you get. A good PA system can cost a couple thousand dollars.