AAC to SLN Converter

Convert AAC to Asterisk signed linear audio online

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Asterisk PBX Ready

Convert AAC audio directly to SLN — the format Asterisk servers need for IVR prompts, hold music, and voice menus.

Telephony Settings

Configure sample rate and channel settings to match your Asterisk PBX requirements before converting.

Browser-Based Tool

No Asterisk installation needed — produce SLN files from AAC in any web browser, then upload to your PBX.

How to convert AAC to SLN

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose sln or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your sln file right afterwards

About formats

AAC (Advanced Audio Coding) is the successor to MP3, standardized by ISO/IEC as part of the MPEG-2 and later MPEG-4 specifications. Designed collaboratively by Fraunhofer, Dolby, Sony, Nokia, and AT&T, AAC delivers superior sound quality at equivalent or lower bit rates — a 96 kbps AAC stream generally matches a 128 kbps MP3 file in perceptual quality. The codec leverages a modified discrete cosine transform combined with advanced psychoacoustic modeling and temporal noise shaping. AAC serves as the default audio format for Apple's ecosystem (iTunes, iPhone, iPad), YouTube, and many streaming services. Its first advantage is excellent compression efficiency — high-fidelity audio using significantly less storage and bandwidth. Second, the format supports sample rates from 8 kHz to 96 kHz and up to 48 channels, suiting everything from voice calls to surround sound. Third, broad industry adoption by Apple and others ensures that virtually every modern device, browser, and media player handles AAC content natively without additional plugins.
Initial release: 1997
SLN (Signed Linear) is a headerless raw audio format storing 16-bit signed linear PCM samples at 8000 Hz mono, most closely associated with Asterisk — the open-source PBX framework developed by Digium (now Sangoma Technologies). Within Asterisk, SLN serves as the native internal audio representation: every codec transcoding operation passes through signed linear as an intermediate step. This makes SLN the backbone of Asterisk's codec translation architecture. The format contains nothing but raw samples — no headers, no metadata, no framing — so parameters must be known in advance. While this lack of self-description might seem limiting, it is actually an advantage in telephony where sample format is fixed by convention and every overhead byte matters across thousands of simultaneous channels. The 8000 Hz rate aligns with the G.711 standard for traditional telephony, capturing the full 300-3400 Hz voice band. Asterisk also supports extended variants (sln16, sln32, sln48) for wideband audio. SLN files require no decoding — just direct memory mapping — making them ideal for real-time mixing, conferencing, and prompt playback in high-density VoIP environments.
Initial release: 1999

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert AAC to SLN?

SLN is the native audio format for the Asterisk PBX — needed for on-hold music, IVR prompts, and system sounds on Asterisk phone servers.

What uses SLN files?

Asterisk PBX servers use SLN files for all audio playback — hold music, greetings, voice menus, and announcement recordings.

What sample rate does SLN use?

Standard Asterisk SLN files use 8 kHz mono, though newer versions support 16 kHz and higher rates.

Is SLN good for music?

Not really — SLN at 8 kHz is telephony-grade. It works for hold music but does not provide high-fidelity reproduction.

Can I batch convert for my PBX?

Upload all your AAC files at once and convert them to SLN in bulk — perfect for preparing an entire Asterisk sound library.

AAC to SLN Quality Rating

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