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

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 ***

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

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

2007-02-13 Thread Doc
-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

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