CDDA to FAP Converter

Convert CD Digital Audio to FAP format online

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Specialized Format

Transform CDDA audio into FAP — starting from perfect CD-quality source ensures the best results for your audio processing needs.

Server-Side Work

FAP conversion runs on our servers. No specialized audio processing tools or SoX installation required locally.

Secure Files

Your CDDA uploads are deleted after conversion. FAP outputs are removed from our servers within 24 hours.

How to convert CDDA to FAP

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

CDDA (Compact Disc Digital Audio), known as the Red Book standard, defines audio stored on music CDs. Jointly developed by Sony and Philips and published in 1980, it established parameters that shaped digital audio for decades: 16-bit linear PCM at 44.1 kHz stereo, yielding 1,411.2 kbps uncompressed. Each disc holds up to 80 minutes organized into tracks with index points, sub-channel data for text display, and error correction codes (CIRC) ensuring reliable playback despite minor scratches. When audio is ripped from a CD, the resulting stream is often saved with the .cdda extension as raw PCM before conversion. The most obvious advantage is uncompressed, lossless nature — what reaches your ears is mathematically identical to the studio master at the specified resolution. Robust error correction provides excellent resilience, maintaining audio integrity even when disc surfaces suffer moderate wear. Having sold billions of units since the first commercial release in 1982, CDDA established baseline quality expectations for digital music and remains the reference against which compressed codecs are measured.
Developer: Sony / Philips
Initial release: October 1980
FAP is a byte-swapped variant of the PAF (Paris Audio File) format associated with the Ensoniq PARIS digital audio workstation, a recording environment popular among project-studio engineers in the late 1990s. Where standard PAF stores sample data in big-endian order, FAP reverses the byte layout for little-endian architectures, enabling direct memory mapping on Intel-based processors without a runtime byte-swap penalty. The underlying payload is uncompressed linear PCM at up to 24-bit depth and 96 kHz sampling, preserving full studio-grade fidelity. Because there is no lossy coding stage, recordings survive unlimited edit cycles with zero generational loss — a critical property during tracking and mixing. The SoX command-line utility maintains read/write support for FAP, making it the most accessible tool for converting legacy PARIS sessions to modern formats. Despite its niche origins, FAP demonstrates solid engineering: the header is minimal and deterministic, eliminating ambiguity that sometimes plagues chunk-based containers. Advantages include bit-perfect audio preservation, fast I/O on x86 hardware due to native byte order, and straightforward interoperability with raw PCM tools.
Developer: Ensoniq
Initial release: 1998

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert CDDA to FAP?

FAP is used in certain audio processing and legacy applications. Converting from CDDA provides uncompressed source material for best results.

What software handles FAP?

SoX is the primary tool for working with FAP files. Specialized audio processing frameworks may also support this format.

Is FAP compressed?

FAP typically contains raw or lightly processed audio data. File sizes remain relatively close to the uncompressed source material.

Can quality be preserved?

When output settings match CDDA specifications (16-bit, 44.1 kHz), the audio data transfers with no quality loss.

Can I convert in bulk?

Upload multiple CDDA files and batch-convert them to FAP — practical for preparing audio data for specialized processing workflows.