GB to minutes for 1440p 60fps @ 20 Mbps Video

16 GB = about 106.67 minutes · fixed video-size estimate · 1440p 60fps @ 20 Mbps Video

Direct Answer

At 1440p 60fps @ 20 Mbps, 16 GB stores about 106.67 minutes of video

This result uses the fixed 1440p 60fps @ 20 Mbps Video bitrate profile to turn storage budget back into viewing time from 2.5 MB/s.

For 1 GB, the 1440p 60fps @ 20 Mbps Video bitrate estimate gives about 6.67 minutes of video duration.

Converter Calculator

106.67 minutes

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Explanation

Formula: minutes = (GB x 1000) / (2.5 x 60) (bitrate 20 Mbps). Why: this page fixes the 1440p 60fps @ 20 Mbps Video video bitrate profile so duration-to-size calculations stay tied to one explicit bitrate assumption.

File size (GB): decimal gigabytes of storage, where 1 GB = 1,000,000,000 bytes.

Duration (minutes): elapsed video time in minutes.

This route is useful when estimating how much video duration fits into a storage budget under the fixed 1440p 60fps @ 20 Mbps Video bitrate profile.

This conversion is profile-based rather than universal: encoded video size depends on bitrate and duration, so mirror pages should keep the same bitrate profile to remain comparable.

Method & Bitrate Profile

  • Method basis: fixed bitrate estimate inverted to recover duration from storage size at 2.5 MB/s.
  • Profile reference: 1440p 60fps @ 20 Mbps Video (2.5 MB/s bitrate basis).
  • Consistency rule: direct answer, calculator, FAQ, and common-value rows all use the same fixed bitrate profile for this route.

Common Conversion Values

File size (GB)Duration (minutes)
1 6.67
2 13.33
5 33.33
10 66.67
16 106.67
32 213.33
64 426.67
128 853.33

Frequently Asked Questions

Which bitrate assumption is fixed on this page?

1440p 60fps @ 20 Mbps with nominal video bitrate 20 Mbps.

What is the opposite direction for File size to Duration?

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

Can this be used for upload-time and storage planning?

Yes. It provides baseline estimates useful for archive sizing, CDN planning, and upload budget checks.