Re: figguring out how many hours you can fit on a cf card

2007-02-14 Thread Michael Lang
160 KBPS divided by two: 80 megs. 80 times 12 is 960, a bit less than
1000 megs. So you'll get at least 12 hours onto a 1 gig CF card.

   *** Michael Lang ***

You wrote:

 How did you figure out the 12 hour thing? 80 times what is 12 and solve 
 algebraicly?
 Sarah,

 I just divide such values by two. This method is a bit crude, but it
 works quite well. If you record with a bitrate of 160 KBPS, the
 sampling
 rate doesn't matter, you'll need a bit less than 80 megs per hour. So
 you will get at least 12 hours onto a one gig card.

*** Michael Lang ***

 You wrote:

 Hello. I am horrible at math so I was trying this on my own and it
 didn't work.
 i was trying to figure out hours many hours fit on a 1 gb flash card
 recording at 44.1khz and 160kbps mp3. I got a disaster when I  tried
 to calculate this. i think I got messed up because I got about 80
 hours when I tried to figure this out. i know this is wrong so can
 someone give me a formula for figuring this out? Thanks.
 Sarah Alawami
 MsN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 skype: marrie1
 Website; www.marrie.org
 Before you take anything away,
   you must have something better to put in its place.-
   Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860) Philosopher

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Re: figguring out how many hours you can fit on a cf card

2007-02-13 Thread Michael Lang
Sarah,

I just divide such values by two. This method is a bit crude, but it
works quite well. If you record with a bitrate of 160 KBPS, the sampling
rate doesn't matter, you'll need a bit less than 80 megs per hour. So
you will get at least 12 hours onto a one gig card.

   *** Michael Lang ***

You wrote:

 Hello. I am horrible at math so I was trying this on my own and it didn't 
 work.
 i was trying to figure out hours many hours fit on a 1 gb flash card 
 recording at 44.1khz and 160kbps mp3. I got a disaster when I  tried to 
 calculate this. i think I got messed up because I got
 about 80 hours when I tried to figure this out. i know this is wrong so can 
 someone give me a formula for figuring this out? Thanks.
 Sarah Alawami
 MsN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 skype: marrie1
 Website; www.marrie.org
 Before you take anything away, 
   you must have something better to put in its place.- 
   Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860) Philosopher

 Audio List Help, Guidelines, Archives and more... 
 http://www.pc-audio.org

 To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to: 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Re: figguring out how many hours you can fit on a cf card

2007-02-13 Thread Sarah
How did you figure out the 12 hour thing? 80 times what is 12 and solve 
algebraicly?
 Sarah,

 I just divide such values by two. This method is a bit crude, but it
 works quite well. If you record with a bitrate of 160 KBPS, the
 sampling
 rate doesn't matter, you'll need a bit less than 80 megs per hour. So
 you will get at least 12 hours onto a one gig card.

*** Michael Lang ***

 You wrote:

 Hello. I am horrible at math so I was trying this on my own and it
 didn't work.
 i was trying to figure out hours many hours fit on a 1 gb flash card
 recording at 44.1khz and 160kbps mp3. I got a disaster when I  tried
 to calculate this. i think I got messed up because I got about 80
 hours when I tried to figure this out. i know this is wrong so can
 someone give me a formula for figuring this out? Thanks.
 Sarah Alawami
 MsN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 skype: marrie1
 Website; www.marrie.org
 Before you take anything away,
   you must have something better to put in its place.-
   Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860) Philosopher

 Audio List Help, Guidelines, Archives and more...
 http://www.pc-audio.org

 To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Re: figguring out how many hours you can fit on a cf card

2007-02-13 Thread Doc
If you have winamp you can pull up a folder or group of files and control 
tab to the playlist window and press alt+control+g and it will tell you the 
average track size and length of play.
another way is to divide your average track size into 104kb.
example, if your average track size is 6000kb divide 104/6000=173 files
**

  Let a smile be your lantern of joy
robert Doc Wright
http://www.wrightplaceinc.net
skype: talmidim
msn
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


- Original Message - 
From: Sarah [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: PC audio discussion list.  pc-audio@pc-audio.org
Sent: Tuesday, February 13, 2007 9:59 AM
Subject: Re: figguring out how many hours you can fit on a cf card


How did you figure out the 12 hour thing? 80 times what is 12 and solve
algebraicly?
 Sarah,

 I just divide such values by two. This method is a bit crude, but it
 works quite well. If you record with a bitrate of 160 KBPS, the
 sampling
 rate doesn't matter, you'll need a bit less than 80 megs per hour. So
 you will get at least 12 hours onto a one gig card.

*** Michael Lang ***

 You wrote:

 Hello. I am horrible at math so I was trying this on my own and it
 didn't work.
 i was trying to figure out hours many hours fit on a 1 gb flash card
 recording at 44.1khz and 160kbps mp3. I got a disaster when I  tried
 to calculate this. i think I got messed up because I got about 80
 hours when I tried to figure this out. i know this is wrong so can
 someone give me a formula for figuring this out? Thanks.
 Sarah Alawami
 MsN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 skype: marrie1
 Website; www.marrie.org
 Before you take anything away,
   you must have something better to put in its place.-
   Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860) Philosopher

 Audio List Help, Guidelines, Archives and more...
 http://www.pc-audio.org

 To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]



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 [EMAIL PROTECTED]



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figguring out how many hours you can fit on a cf card

2007-02-12 Thread Sarah
Hello. I am horrible at math so I was trying this on my own and it didn't work.
i was trying to figure out hours many hours fit on a 1 gb flash card recording 
at 44.1khz and 160kbps mp3. I got a disaster when I  tried to calculate this. i 
think I got messed up because I got about 80 hours when I tried to figure this 
out. i know this is wrong so can someone give me a formula for figuring this 
out? Thanks.
Sarah Alawami
MsN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
skype: marrie1
Website; www.marrie.org
Before you take anything away, 
  you must have something better to put in its place.- 
  Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860) Philosopher

Audio List Help, Guidelines, Archives and more... 
http://www.pc-audio.org

To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]