It seems strange that I have to 'waste' 680 MB of capacity!
Thanks for your input. AL
Don't pay attention to running time, only to file size. A 70 min rating is
based on a 192KB Encoding rate. You files are running around 32 KB rate, and
the CD will hold as many as can fit in terms of file size against the 700 KB
capacity.
>Don't pay attention to running time, only to file size. A 70 min rating is
>based on a 192KB Encoding rate. You files are running around 32 KB rate, and
>the CD will hold as many as can fit in terms of file size against the 700 KB
>capacity.
Unless of course the OP wants to play the CD on a device that cannot
handle MP3 CDs, like many in-car CD systems for example.
Even though the compressed size of the file is 12MB, when written to a
audio CD, it will need to be recoded and this leads to the size of the
audio data increasing by 10 times or more.
> Does this mean that I can only record two 30-minute programs
> although the total bit amount is only 20 MB?
It depends on the type of CD you make. If you make a conventional audio CD
that will play in almost any CD player, then yes. The files will get much
larger, and take up more space as they are converted to meet the
specifications that an audio CD must have.
If you make an MP3 CD, you are limited to computers and newer/fancier CD
players that specifically claim to have MP3 playback capability. But you can
get many more programs on one disc.
William