Yamaha D24 Owner's Manual page 16

Yamaha digital multitrack recorder owner's manual
Hide thumbs Also See for D24:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

The following table lists the approximate recording times available using 640 MB MO
disks at a variety of recording resolutions and sampling rates.
Sampling
Track minutes
Bit
Rate
44.1 kHz
48 kHz
16
88.2 kHz
96 kHz
44.1 kHz
48 kHz
20
88.2 kHz
96 kHz
44.1 kHz
48 kHz
24
88.2 kHz
96 kHz
Higher recording resolutions and sampling rates offer higher quality, but produce more
data, which reduces the total available recording time. Use the Remain function to
check the available recording time. See "Checking the Time Remaining" on page 38 for
more information.
The number of tracks available for simultaneous recording can be expanded using mul-
tiple D24s. See "Multiple D24s" on page 144 for more information.
The D24's internal MO disk drive supports 230 MB, 540 MB, and 640 MB MO disks.
See the Yamaha Professional Audio Web site at the address below for up-to-date news
on MO disks.
<http://www.yamaha.co.jp/product/proaudio/homeenglish/>
Preformatted MO Disks
MO disks preformatted for use with PC or Macintosh computers can be used with the
D24, but require formatting before use. See "Formatting MO Disks" on page 26 for
more information.
Calculating the approximate Recording Time
You can calculate the approximate recording time for a given recording resolution,
sampling rate, and disk capacity as follows. First multiple the recording resolution by
the sampling rate to get the number of bits produced per second (e.g., 16 44100 =
705,600 bits per second). Then divide that by eight to get the number of bytes per sec-
ond (e.g., 705,600 8 = 88,200 bytes per second). Multiply that by 60 to get the number
of bytes required per minute (e.g., 88,200 60 = 5,292,000 bytes per minute, or 5.292
MB/min). Now you know the number of megabytes required to store one minute of
audio data, simply divide the capacity of the disk by that number to get the approximate
number of track minutes (e.g., 640,000,000 5,292,000 = 120 minutes). Finally, divide
the number of track minutes by two, four, or eight to get the approximate recording
time available for several tracks (e.g., 120 8 = 15 minutes for 8-track simultaneous
recording).
2 tracks
(mono)
120 min
60 min
111 min
55 min
60 min
30 min
55 min
27 min
96 min
48 min
88 min
44 min
48 min
24 min
44 min
22 min
80 min
40 min
74 min
37 min
40 min
20 min
37 min
18 min
Choosing MO Disks
4 tracks
8 tracks
30 min
15 min
27 min
13 min
15 min
13 min
24 min
12 min
22 min
11 min
12 min
11 min
20 min
10 min
18 min
9 min
10 min
9 min
D24—Owner's Manual
7

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents