Andy Goodtimes 0 Posted July 26, 2009 Report Share Posted July 26, 2009 I have been subscribing to CD Pool Hits & Radio now since mid December so have 15 discs = 300 tracks. I know exactly on what disc to find the majority of them but the odd track that doesn't get played much can cause a problem, especially when its busy. I want to rip these discs to a pen drive in order that it can live on my keys, I can top it up each time a new disc arrives and when I am out I can plug it into the powered USB hub on the Denon and find tracks quickly via the keyboard. I would like a pen drive that will hold about 3,000+ tracks in order that one will last at least 4 or 5 years but I'm not sure how much space that will require...I would like to rip them at 320. Will a 16GB be large enough? I can get one for £20 but then going larger is a pretty big jump in price. Link to post Share on other sites
gadget 0 Posted July 26, 2009 Report Share Posted July 26, 2009 100 tracks is somewhere between 800-900Mbytes a time, if encoding at 320k mp3 using lame encoder's insane mode (the highest quality setting). For me that would work out about somewhere between 1600-1800 odd tracks on a 16Gb drive. (Don't forget overheads and that 16Gb tends to be overstated as 1000's of bytes, rather than what a propert Gb *should* be). Obviously at lower quality settings you'd get more on there.... Cheers, David DJ David Graham Tel: 01204 537716 / 01942 418415 Email: hello@djgraham.co.uk FB: http://facebook.com/djdavidgraham Web: [under construction - it really is coming soon :)] Link to post Share on other sites
vokf 0 Posted July 26, 2009 Report Share Posted July 26, 2009 For me that would work out about somewhere between 1600-1800 odd tracks on a 16Gb drive. (Don't forget overheads and that 16Gb tends to be overstated as 1000's of bytes, rather than what a propert Gb *should* be). <pendant> 16Gb? shurely you mean 16GB? 16Gb (Gigabit) = 2GB (GigaByte) I've been caught with this at work (specifying flash memory for a product), supplier emailed"32Gb", I assumed that was GigaBytes, but clarified just before ordering lots of PCBs, and found they quoted Gigabits (not enough for our application) I normally use longhand unless its not that important. Link to post Share on other sites
gadget 0 Posted July 26, 2009 Report Share Posted July 26, 2009 16Gb? shurely you mean 16GB? 16Gb (Gigabit) = 2GB (GigaByte) I've been caught with this at work (specifying flash memory for a product), supplier emailed"32Gb", I assumed that was GigaBytes, but clarified just before ordering lots of PCBs, and found they quoted Gigabits (not enough for our application) I normally use longhand unless its not that important. Heh. Kilobytes are an oddball too - which is a lower-case k, the rest are all capitals.. David DJ David Graham Tel: 01204 537716 / 01942 418415 Email: hello@djgraham.co.uk FB: http://facebook.com/djdavidgraham Web: [under construction - it really is coming soon :)] Link to post Share on other sites
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