MB to seconds for 44.1kHz / 16-bit mono PCM Audio
10 MB = about 113.4 seconds · fixed PCM recording estimate · 44.1kHz / 16-bit mono PCM Audio
Direct Answer
At 44.1kHz / 16-bit mono PCM, 10 MB stores about 113.4 seconds of audio
This result uses the fixed 44.1khz / 16-bit mono pcm audio PCM profile to turn storage budget back into recording time from 88,200 bytes/s.
For 1 MB, the 44.1kHz / 16-bit mono PCM Audio PCM estimate gives about 11.3 seconds of recording time.
Converter Calculator
113.4 seconds
SwitchExplanation
Formula: seconds = MB / 0.0882 (PCM 44.1kHz / 16-bit mono). Why: this page fixes the 44.1khz / 16-bit mono pcm audio PCM profile so duration-to-size calculations stay tied to one explicit sample-rate, bit-depth, and channel layout.
File size (MB): decimal megabytes of storage, where 1 MB = 1,000,000 bytes.
Duration (seconds): elapsed audio time in seconds.
This route is useful when estimating how much recording time fits into a storage budget under the fixed 44.1khz / 16-bit mono pcm audio PCM profile.
This conversion is profile-based rather than universal: uncompressed PCM file size depends on sample rate, bit depth, and channel count, so mirror pages should keep the same recording profile to remain comparable.
Common Conversion Values
| File size (MB) | Duration (seconds) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 11.3 |
| 2 | 22.7 |
| 5 | 56.7 |
| 10 | 113.4 |
| 25 | 283.4 |
| 50 | 566.9 |
| 100 | 1,133.8 |
Frequently Asked Questions
Which PCM settings are fixed for mb to seconds?
MB to seconds uses 44100 Hz, 16-bit depth, and 1 channels for this profile.
How is the 5.292 MB per minute factor calculated for 44.1kHz / 16-bit mono?
Bytes per second = 44100 × (16 / 8) × 1 = 88200 bytes/s. Using decimal MB (1 MB = 1,000,000 bytes), that is 0.0882 MB/s or 5.292 MB/min.
How do I reverse MB to s for 44.1kHz / 16-bit mono?
Use the opposite route for 44.1kHz / 16-bit mono to convert duration (seconds) back to file size (mb) with the same PCM assumptions.
Can mb to seconds support storage budgeting?
Yes. MB to seconds is suitable for first-pass recording and archive estimates in PCM workflows.