Megapixels to MB for RAW 10-bit compressed Image Files

33 megapixels = about 49.5 MB · fixed image-size estimate · RAW 10-bit compressed Image Files

Direct Answer

33 megapixels equals about 49.5 MB

This result uses the fixed raw 10-bit compressed image files estimate, anchored to one bytes-per-megapixel storage model.

For 12 megapixels, the RAW 10-bit compressed Image Files estimate gives about 18 MB.

Converter Calculator

49.5 MB

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Explanation

Formula: MB = MP x (1500000 / 1,000,000). Why: this page fixes the raw 10-bit compressed image files profile so size-per-megapixel assumptions stay explicit across calculator, direct answer, and table values.

Image size (megapixels): the approximate pixel-count scale of one image, expressed in millions of pixels.

File size (MB): decimal megabytes of storage, where 1 MB = 1,000,000 bytes.

This route is useful when translating between image resolution, storage footprint, and batch-planning estimates under the fixed raw 10-bit compressed image files assumption set.

This conversion is profile-based rather than universal: image file size depends on format, compression, and workflow assumptions, so mirror pages should keep the same profile to stay comparable.

Method & Image Profile

  • Method basis: fixed bytes-per-megapixel estimate for the selected format and compression profile.
  • Profile reference: RAW 10-bit compressed Image Files (1,500,000 bytes/MP estimate).
  • Consistency rule: direct answer, calculator, and common-value rows all use the same fixed image profile and bytes-per-megapixel estimate for this route.

Common Conversion Values

Image size (megapixels)File size (MB)
12 18
24 36
33 49.5
45 67.5
61 91.5

Frequently Asked Questions

Which format assumption is fixed on this page?

RAW 10-bit compressed with 1500000 bytes per megapixel.

How can I convert back from File size to Image size?

Use the mirror File size to Image size route; it applies the inverse relationship for the opposite direction with the same assumptions.

Can this replace real export tests?

No. It is an estimation model. Final pipelines should be validated with sample exports from your actual workflow.