Recording time calculation, Uncompressed recording time in track-hours – Sound Devices 702 User Manual

Page 37

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702 User Guide and Technical Information

35

Post-record metadata editing can also be performed using a Mac OS or Windows based computer with
Sound Devices Wave Agent Beta.

See Wave Agent Beta for more details.

Recording Time Calculation

The calculation of available 702 recording time involves three factors:

track count - how many concurrent audio tracks are selected for recording.

data rate - calculated from the sampling rate and bit depth for non-compressed audio and by

bit rate for data compressed audio. Data rate determines how big the data “container” is for the

audio signal (see the calculation below for determining PCM audio).

storage capacity - typically expressed in GB

Uncompressed Recording Time in Track-Hours

Data Rate (bit depth/sampling rate), one track

16/44.1

(5.05 MB/min)

16/48

(5.49 MB/min)

24/48

(8.24 MB/min)

24/96

(16.5 MB/min)

24/192

(33.0 MB/min)

Stora

g

e in GB

(1000 MB = 1 GB)

1

3.30

3.03

2.02

1.01

0.51

2

6.60

6.07

4.05

2.02

1.01

4

13.2

12.1

8.09

4.05

2.02

8

26.4

24.3

16.2

8.09

4.05

15

49.5

45.5

30.3

15.2

7.59

40

132

121

80.9

40.5

20.2

60

198

182

121

60.7

30.3

100

330

303

202

101

50.6

The chart above shows recording time available with the 702. Time is expressed in hours per track

(track-hours) at the specified data rate supported by the 702. If recording two tracks, divide the track

hours figure by two. Similarly for four-track recording, divide track-hours by four. Note that the 702

supports additional sampling rate / bit depth combinations, however, only the most common are

included below.

Record Time

The chart shows that when recording 24-bit/48 kHz audio to a 40 GB hard drive the maximum

amount of recording time available roughly 80 track-hours. If recording a stereo two-track file, this

yields 40 stereo hours of record time.

Note that most storage media now quote capacity in GB using SI units, where 1000 megabytes equals one
gigabyte.

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