4.8 gb
17 GB
4.7 GB
17 GB
about 7GB
4.7GB on a standard DVD - can be a duel layer disk (double sided) which holds 9.4GB
A single-sided, single layer DVD can hold 4.7GB of data, whereas a single-sided, dual-layer can hold 8.5GB. Double-sided, single-layer holds 9.4GB and double-sided, dual-layer holds 17.1GB. So anyone of these combinations can hold a 4.7 ISO image although the single-sided, single-layer may be a tight fit. I would use the single-sided, dual-layer and you won't have any problem. An ISO is simply an exact duplicate of someting (like a Linux operating system) so you will be ok. Hope this helps.
DVD SizesThe most common DVD type is DVD-5 (1 side, 1 layer) having 4.7GB of storage. Double-sided DVDs are rarely used. DVD-5 4.70GB Single sided, Single layerDVD-9 8.54GB Single sided, Dual layerDVD-10 9.40GB Double sided, Single layersDVD-14 13.24GB Double sided, One side single layer, one side dual layerDVD-18 17.08GB Double sided, Dual layerWhen making a DVD, you can put 4,35 GByte of .vob material on it.
the are standard DVD disks where data is on one side and a picture or something is on the other side (like most DVDs). Double layer means that there are 2 layers inside the disk to store data on, instead of one, which increases data capacity.
Most blank CDs are not double-sided. If you have one that is indeed double-sided, then yes.
Each side can hold a maximum of 50GB, so a double-sided can hold up to 100GB, but there haven't been any double-sided Blu-Rays yet
25 GB for single layer 50 GB for double layer
First off, a calrification: I am talking about a "regular" DL: disk, not a Blu-Ray disk. The capacity printed on the disk is 8.5 Gb, but some of this goes to overheads and formatting information. The useable space is more like 8.2 Gb, and can vary depending on the data being stored, e.g. movies versus data.
25GB single layer, 50GB double layer
Single-sided, single-layer Blu-ray disc.