If you store high quality movie then it takes about 2GB to store an hour long video, So you can save as much as 16hour of video to your 32 gb flash drive.In case the video quality is lower than you can store double i.e. 32 hours or even more video recording.
It depends upon many factors including the quality of the video, the resolution of the video (e.g., standard definition will take less space, and therefore more time into 32GB than will high definition), and the type of video encoding being used. Raw video itself would fill up 32gb very rapidly, but I would estimate that you should be able to average between 4 to 30 hours of video depending upon your quality settings. (Over-the-air HD broadcasts typically consumes between 4-8GB an hour.)
1 million hours of video is available from these cards
48 hours
48 hours
100mb / min in 5 minute increments
Today most police cars have a video camera recording most of the time.
one time or baby
A 2 GB memory card will hold 30 minutes of HD video or 50 minutes of standard quality video. The actual amount of record time varies greatly based on the camera and its recording method.
15
2 hours
It allows up to 14 minutes of recording time.
if its 4 generation yes
You must get a person's consent any time the video recorder is set to record, no matter what it is recording. Even an old tennis ball, or a boot found in the street. If you video record it, you must get everyone's permission first.
When you're recording how much pie you've eaten.
The amount of time you can record to a DVD depends on the recording mode you choose. DVD recorders have various recording modes that vary from recorder to recorder but most include SP, LP, and EP modes. Some also offer XP, SLP, SEP modes. These modes offer a trade off between quality and recording time with XP having the highest quality but the shortest recording time and SEP having the longest recording time but the poorest quality.The quality and recording times of each recording mode will vary between different DVD recorders. Here is a list of common recording times for each recording mode:XP - 1 HourSP - 2 HoursLP - 4 HoursEP - 6 HoursSLP - 8 HoursSEP - 10 HoursFor all practical purposes, SP is what is most commonly used. Use LP if you need to record a live event or a continuous recording when you cannot change DVDs midway through. When it comes to recording DVDs, a general rule is to have the highest quality input source possible and the greatest recording quality that you can get. For example, recording a VHS to DVD, use SP. Most VHS are 120 minutes long, so the SP recording of two hours will fit the VHS tape on one DVD without any quality loss and minimum risk of skipping.In conclusion, DVDs can hold up to 10 hours of video, depending on the DVD recorder you use. With DVDs, time and quality are inversely proportional. The longer the recording time, the poorer the quality and the more likely you will have video and audio skips during playback. For most practical application, use SP to maintain a high quality and get around two hours of recording time.
Step 1: Select the shooting mode to video. (If U can't do this plz see the Quick/full reference guide.) Step2: Full press the shutter button to start recording step3: Full press the sutter button to stop recording. Regarding how much (time) of video you can record at a one go plz refer to the camera manual. This depends upon your available amount of space. There some restrictions when you shoot in video mode. Plz refer to the guides to understand the restrictions.