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HRZ to RTF Converter

Export HRZ to RTF — simple online conversion

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Visual Fidelity

Your HRZ imagery is carefully converted to RTF with maximum quality retention. No unnecessary degradation during the transformation process.

Remote Processing

The heavy lifting of HRZ to RTF conversion happens on cloud servers — your computer or phone stays fast and unaffected.

Format Bridge

Go from specialized HRZ (amateur radio slow-scan television) to universally supported RTF — making your data accessible to anyone without niche software.

How to convert HRZ to RTF

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

HRZ is a simple raster image format associated with slow-scan television (SSTV), a method of transmitting still images over radio frequencies used by amateur radio operators since the late 1950s when Copthorne Macdonald pioneered the technology. HRZ files store images at a fixed resolution of 256x240 pixels in raw RGB format, with each pixel represented as three bytes (red, green, blue) at 8 bits per channel, producing uncompressed files of exactly 184,320 bytes. The format has no header, no metadata, and no compression — the file is simply a sequential dump of raw pixel data in row-major order. This extreme simplicity reflects the format's origins in the amateur radio community, where SSTV images are transmitted as audio tones encoding luminance and chrominance values over narrow-bandwidth HF (shortwave) radio channels. The fixed 256x240 resolution corresponds to common SSTV transmission modes, and HRZ files serve as the digital capture or storage medium for received SSTV transmissions. One advantage is the format's zero-overhead structure: with no parsing, decompression, or metadata processing required, HRZ files can be read by any program capable of reading raw pixel data with known dimensions — a single function call in virtually any programming language. The format's connection to amateur radio SSTV culture is another notable aspect: HRZ files document a unique form of image communication where operators transmit photographs over thousands of miles using nothing but radio waves and audio encoding, a practice that continues today alongside digital modes. HRZ files can be opened by ImageMagick, GIMP, and specialized SSTV software.
Developer: SSTV Community
Initial release: 1985
RTF (Rich Text Format) is a document interchange format developed by Microsoft and first published in 1987 with Word 3.0. The format encodes document content and formatting as plain ASCII text using control words (backslash-prefixed commands) and groups (curly-brace-delimited sections) that describe fonts, character formatting, paragraph layout, tables, images, and page setup. Because RTF is fundamentally a text format with no binary components, documents pass cleanly through any text channel — email systems, clipboard operations, and cross-platform transfers — without corruption. Microsoft designed RTF explicitly as a cross-application and cross-platform exchange format, and it achieved broad adoption: virtually every word processor, text editor, and document tool on every operating system has supported RTF reading and writing for decades. One advantage is exceptional cross-platform compatibility — an RTF document created on any application renders with consistent formatting on any other, making it the most reliable format for text exchange between incompatible systems. The text-based structure provides another benefit: RTF files resist corruption, are trivially generated by programs (requiring only string concatenation), and can be debugged by reading the raw markup in a text editor. While RTF lacks modern features like tracked changes and advanced layout controls, and Microsoft declared the specification frozen at version 1.9.1 in 2008, the format persists as a dependable interchange option where DOCX compatibility cannot be assumed.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: 1987

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert HRZ to RTF?

RTF is widely supported across devices and applications — converting from HRZ makes your SSTV images accessible to anyone without specialized tools.

What programs open RTF?

Standard office suites open RTF — Microsoft Office, LibreOffice, Google Docs, and dedicated viewers all handle this format.

Is the conversion instant?

Near-instant for typical images — the cloud-based processing handles HRZ to RTF conversion quickly. Very large data may take a moment.

What is the HRZ format?

HRZ is used in amateur radio slow-scan television. It stores radio-transmitted images and ham radio communication — converting to RTF makes this data universally accessible.

Will my image lose quality?

Quality depends on the target format. RTF rich text output preserves data within its format constraints — no unnecessary degradation occurs.

Can I convert multiple HRZ images at once?

Yes — upload several HRZ images in one session and convert them all to RTF simultaneously. Batch processing saves significant time.