CVS to SLN Converter

Move your CVS audio to SLN format in seconds online

Drop files here. 1 GB maximum file size or Sign Up
to
Facebook Amazon Microsoft Tesla Nestle Walmart L'Oreal

Works Everywhere

No platform restrictions. Convert your CVS audio to SLN on any operating system through a standard web browser.

Fast Results

Speed matters. Our converter transforms CVS to SLN in moments, so you get your audio in the right format without waiting.

Format Upgrade

CVS recordings become far more usable as SLN. The conversion unlocks raw signed linear audio that CVS cannot provide.

How to convert CVS 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

CVS is a telephony audio encoding based on Continuously Variable Slope Delta modulation, representing voice through a 1-bit delta scheme where step size adapts to track input amplitude. Developed within CCITT (now ITU-T) standards during the 1970s, CVS encodes by comparing each sample to the previous one and outputting a single bit — up or down — with slope magnitude adjusting based on recent bit patterns. This yields extremely low bit rates, typically 16 kbps at 8 kHz sampling, efficient for narrowband voice over constrained channels. CVS files store signed delta-encoded data and are commonly processed using tools like SoX. A significant advantage is bandwidth economy: the 1-bit-per-sample approach demands minimal transmission capacity, essential for military radio links and early digital telephone infrastructure. The adaptive slope mechanism also prevents overload distortion on rapidly changing signals while keeping granular noise acceptable during quiet passages. Though modern wideband codecs have superseded CVS, it retains historical importance and niche utility in legacy telephony and embedded communication devices.
Developer: CCITT / ITU-T
Initial release: 1970
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 should I switch from CVS to SLN?

CVS suffers from not recognized by modern audio software. SLN offers VoIP system integration.

Which software opens SLN recordings?

You can open SLN with Asterisk PBX, SoX, and VoIP telephony systems.

Is there quality loss from CVS to SLN?

No quality is lost. SLN stores audio without additional compression, so your CVS recording carries over at full original fidelity.

Is CVS to SLN conversion available on all platforms?

It works on any platform — desktop or mobile. Just open your browser, upload the CVS recording, and convert to SLN.

Is my CVS audio kept private during conversion?

Your uploaded CVS recordings are deleted immediately after conversion. The resulting SLN outputs are removed within 24 hours.

Do I need to install anything for CVS to SLN?

No installation required. The converter runs entirely in your web browser — just upload, convert, and download.