DV to AU Converter

Extract DV audio and save as AU format online

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DV to AU

Extract audio from DV camcorder recordings and encode in AU format — bridging professional video and specialized audio needs.

Encoding Control

Set sample rate, encoding quality, and format-specific options before converting to create AU files matching your requirements.

Secure Processing

Uploaded DV files are deleted right after conversion. AU outputs are removed from our servers within 24 hours automatically.

How to convert DV to AU

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

DV (Digital Video) is a video recording and compression standard developed through a collaboration of major electronics manufacturers, formalized by the HD Digital VCR Conference consortium that included Sony, Panasonic, JVC, Philips, and Toshiba. The specification was finalized in late 1994 and consumer products began shipping in 1995, establishing DV as the first widely adopted digital recording format for consumer and prosumer video production. DV uses intraframe-only compression with discrete cosine transform encoding, compressing each frame independently at a fixed bit rate of approximately 25 Mbps for standard definition content. This approach means every frame is a complete image, making DV footage particularly easy to edit since any frame can serve as a clean cut point without the complex decoding dependencies found in interframe formats like MPEG. The format records video at 720x480 (NTSC) or 720x576 (PAL) resolution with 4:1:1 or 4:2:0 chroma subsampling. Professional variants, including DVCPRO developed by Panasonic and DVCAM by Sony, offer enhanced robustness and higher chroma quality for broadcast use. DV tape cassettes became the dominant recording medium for independent filmmakers, journalists, and event videographers throughout the late 1990s and early 2000s, earning a lasting reputation as a reliable acquisition format.
Developer: Sony & Panasonic
Initial release: 1995
AU is an audio file format introduced by Sun Microsystems for its Unix workstations and the NeXT platform. It features a minimal 24-byte header specifying data offset, size, encoding type, sample rate, and channel count, followed by the audio payload. AU supports numerous encodings, including uncompressed linear PCM at various bit depths, mu-law and A-law companding (logarithmic compression used in telephone systems), and several ADPCM variants. This versatility made AU a workhorse across early Unix environments, web audio (Java applets defaulted to AU), and telephony applications. One advantage is simplicity: the compact header and straightforward structure make it trivial to parse, generate, and stream programmatically. The built-in mu-law option provides another benefit, delivering reasonable voice quality at just 8 KB per second — half the rate of 16-bit uncompressed audio — invaluable when storage and bandwidth were scarce. Although modern formats have largely supplanted AU in consumer applications, it retains a foothold in scientific computing and audio processing pipelines where minimal overhead and reliable cross-platform behavior are valued.
Developer: Sun Microsystems
Initial release: 1992

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert DV to AU?

Sun AU Audio is a Sun Microsystems audio format for Unix systems — useful when your workflow or target system specifically requires this audio format.

What plays AU files?

VLC, Audacity, Sox, and Unix/Linux audio applications can handle AU playback for audio listening and processing.

Is the audio quality preserved?

Quality depends on the encoding settings you choose. Configure parameters before converting to achieve your desired output fidelity.

Can I adjust encoding settings?

Yes — set sample rate, encoding quality, and other parameters before conversion to tailor the AU output to your needs.

Is extraction faster than video conversion?

Audio extraction skips video processing entirely, so DV to AU conversion completes faster than full video format changes.