This calculator helps you estimate filesize, using bandwidth and time as inputs. Use it to estimate video file size, disk size, network backup capacity...
15 minutes * 13 MB/s
15 minutes
13 MB/s
= 15 minutes * 13 MB/s
= 11.7 GB
11.7 GB
Compare 11.7 GB to standard capacities from:Hard disk • Tape drive • Optical drive •
CDROM 650MB x 18 units = 11.7 GB • CDROM 700MB x 16.7 units = 11.7 GB • CDROM 800MB x 14.6 units = 11.7 GB • Mini-DVD Single-sided x 8 units = 11.7 GB • Mini-DVD Double-sided x 4 units = 11.7 GB • DVD Single-sided x 2.5 units = 11.7 GB • DVD Double-sided x 1.2 units = 11.7 GB • Blu-Ray Single layer = 2.1 files of 11.7 GB • Blu-Ray Double layer = 4.3 files of 11.7 GB • Blu-Ray BDXL/BD-RE = 8.5 files of 11.7 GB •
Multiply bandwidth by time: Size = Bandwidth × Time. Convert units first: 100 Mbps × 60 seconds = 6000 Megabits = 750 MB. Remember: 8 bits = 1 byte, so divide bits by 8 to get bytes.
Depends on bitrate: YouTube HD (5 Mbps) = 2.25 GB/hour. Netflix HD (5.8 Mbps) = 2.6 GB/hour. 4K streaming (15-25 Mbps) = 7-11 GB/hour. Blu-ray quality (40 Mbps) = 18 GB/hour.
MB (megabyte) = 1,000,000 bytes (decimal, SI standard). MiB (mebibyte) = 1,048,576 bytes (binary, 2^20). Hard drives use MB; Windows often shows MiB. A "1 TB" drive shows as 931 GiB in Windows.
At Netflix HD quality (2.6 GB/hr): 1TB = 385 hours. At 4K (10 GB/hr): 1TB = 100 hours. At Blu-ray quality (18 GB/hr): 1TB = 55 hours. Compressed formats like H.265 can nearly double these numbers.