<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en"> <head> <title>sizes.nfo</title> <style type="text/css"> @font-face { font-family: nfo; font-style: normal; font-weight: normal; src: url(nfo.eot); } .nfo { padding: 12px; font-family: nfo, courier new; font-size: 11px; line-height: 1em; } </style> </head> <body> <pre class="nfo">XVID: 685MB < xvid size < 702MB 702265KB < xvid size < 719694KB (windows explorer viewed size) 719119885 bytes < xvid size < 736966656 bytes max = 736,966,656 bytes (719694 KB )(702 MB) minimum = 713,031,680 bytes (696320 KB )(680 MB) txd2k5 states: - Release runtime must be at least 50 minutes for using the full burnable media capacity. In such cases, releases MUST utilize a MINIMUM of 680mb of the 700mb standard burnable media (Multi-CD releases MUST conform to the 680mb minimum, for each CD used). Any other use of the media shall not be over 350mb (Sizes between 350mb to 680mb are not allowed). txd2k9 states: - MAXIMUM CD media capacity value is 736966656 bytes = 719694 KB = 702 MB - MINIMUM CD media capacity value is 723517440 bytes = 706560 KB = 690 MB http://rules.nukenet.info/t.html?id=2005_XViD.nfo http://rules.nukenet.info/t.html?id=2009_XViD.nfo http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CD-ROM#Capacity _______________________________________________________________________________ DVDR: 4,718,592,000 Bytes 4,608,000 KB 4,500 MB 4.395 GB wikipedia claims: DVD-R = 4,707,319,808 Bytes DVD+R = 4,700,372,992 Bytes DVD-R DL = 8,543,666,176 Bytes DVD+R DL = 8,547,991,552 Bytes ^^^ old. new( tdrx2k9 ): 4,700,372,992 bytes -> http://rules.nukenet.info/n.html?id=2009_DVDR.nfo http://rules.nukenet.info/t.html?id=2005_DVDR.nfo http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DVDR#Recordable_DVD_capacity_comparison _______________________________________________________________________________ BDr: TBDR2K9 States: between 22888 MB and 23866 MB unless source is BDR25 Single Layer: 23841.86MB Dual Layer : ? Wikipedia claims: 25 GB (23.28 GiB) 50 GB (46.57 GiB) http://rules.nukenet.info/t.html?id=2009_BDr.nfo http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluray http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?p=16169482 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GiB _______________________________________________________________________________ X264: 5.1) Final mkv file size in MiB (1048576 bytes) must be: Multiples of 2240 DVD5/x (1493, 1120, etc.) 8140, 2713 In addition, 3360 and 4070 are allowed for 1080p tv. 5.2) A max undersize of 40 MiB can be tolerated. minimum acceptable filesizes: 367 ( 407 - 40 ) 408 ( 448 - 40 ) 457 ( 497 - 40 ) 520 ( 560 - 40 ) 300 ( 640 - 40 ) 706 ( 746 - 40 ) 856 ( 896 - 40 ) 1080 ( 1120 - 40 ) 1453 ( 1493 - 40 ) 2200 ( 2240 - 40 ) 2673 ( 2713 - 40 ) 4440 ( 4480 - 40 ) 6680 ( 6720 - 40 ) 8100 ( 8140 - 40 ) 8920 ( 8960 - 40 ) 11160 ( 11200 - 40 ) 13400 ( 13440 - 40 ) 15640 ( 15680 - 40 ) 17880 ( 17920 - 40 ) 20120 ( 20160 - 40 ) etc etc. http://rules.nukenet.info/t.html?id=2008_X264-2.nfo http://rules.nukenet.info/x3Zw326.png </pre> </body> </html>