HCOM to FAP Converter

Transcode HCOM audio to PARIS FAP format online

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Pro Audio Legacy

Bridge Macintosh HCOM to the Ensoniq PARIS ecosystem — convert to FAP for vintage professional audio workstation projects.

Cloud Conversion

No Ensoniq hardware required. The HCOM to FAP encoding runs entirely on our servers from any browser.

Privacy First

HCOM uploads are erased after processing. FAP outputs are automatically deleted within 24 hours.

How to convert HCOM 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

HCOM is a Huffman-coded audio format from the early Macintosh era, designed to shrink digitized sound for distribution on floppy disks and bulletin board systems when storage was precious and modems were slow. The encoder takes 8-bit unsigned PCM input, computes a frequency table of sample-delta values, and builds an optimal Huffman tree that replaces common deltas with short bit sequences. Compression ratios of 2:1 or better were typical for speech recordings, a meaningful saving when a 3.5-inch floppy held only 800 KB. Files were distributed as Macintosh resource forks and played through utilities like SoundApp and the BinHex ecosystem that defined Mac software exchange in the late 1980s. The format supported sample rates up to 22.255 kHz, matching the output capabilities of original Macintosh sound hardware. Tools such as SoX retain HCOM decoding support, ensuring that archived recordings remain accessible decades later. HCOM holds three practical advantages for preservation work: lossless compression that recovers the original samples exactly, a self-contained Huffman table embedded in each file for dependency-free decoding, and historical prevalence across thousands of vintage Mac sound archives.
Developer: Apple Computer
Initial release: 1985
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

What is FAP?

FAP is a PARIS Audio File format used by Ensoniq PARIS digital audio workstations — professional recording systems from the late 1990s.

Why convert HCOM to FAP?

For projects involving Ensoniq PARIS hardware or preserving audio in the FAP format for vintage digital audio workstation collections.

Is FAP widely used?

No. FAP is specific to the Ensoniq PARIS ecosystem. It is a niche format mainly relevant to collectors and retro audio production.

What reads FAP files?

SOX processes FAP audio. The original PARIS hardware and software also handle FAP natively.

How fast is this?

HCOM files are tiny. The FAP conversion completes within seconds on our cloud infrastructure.