HTK to SNDR Converter

Re-encode speech research HTK audio as SNDR online

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Format Freedom

Bridge HTK and SNDR formats with a single click. Move audio from speech research to mainstream compatibility.

No Install Needed

No downloads or plugins required. Convert HTK to SNDR directly in your web browser on any device.

Cross-Platform

Run the converter on any operating system or device. The web-based tool adapts to your screen automatically.

How to convert HTK to SNDR

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

HTK is the native waveform container for the Hidden Markov Model Toolkit, a software suite developed at Cambridge University's Engineering Department for speech recognition research. First distributed in 1993, HTK rapidly became a reference platform in computational linguistics labs worldwide, and its file format followed suit. Each file stores a sequence of parameter vectors or raw samples prefixed by a 12-byte header specifying the number of frames, the frame period in 100 ns units, the byte count per frame, and a type code indicating the data kind — options range from waveform PCM to Mel-frequency cepstral coefficients and filter-bank energies. This versatility lets a single container carry both source audio and extracted features without changing parsers. The deliberately minimal header avoids alignment padding or optional chunks, making the format trivial to read from C, Python, or MATLAB with a few lines of binary I/O. Three advantages underpin HTK's lasting relevance: tight integration with the HTK training and recognition pipeline, deterministic byte layout that eliminates parser ambiguity, and widespread adoption in academic corpora.
Initial release: 1993
SNDR is the audio file format produced by Sounder, an early MS-DOS sound recording and playback utility from the early 1990s. Before Windows brought multimedia to the mainstream, Sounder was among a handful of DOS programs that let PC users capture and play audio through rudimentary hardware — often the PC speaker itself or early 8-bit sound cards. The format stores 8-bit unsigned PCM samples without any file header, relying on application defaults to determine playback parameters. Sample rates were typically low (4000 to 11025 Hz), reflecting hardware limits and storage costs when a 20 MB hard drive was considered generous. One practical advantage was absolute minimalism — with zero overhead bytes, every bit of the file was audio data, which mattered when storage was measured in kilobytes. The format could be piped directly to sound hardware without parsing, making real-time playback feasible on slow processors. Despite its simplicity, SNDR holds a place in computing history as one of the formats that brought digital audio to ordinary PCs. Files from this era occasionally surface in retrocomputing archives. SoX and ffmpeg can interpret SNDR files given the correct parameters, enabling preservation of early digital audio recordings.
Developer: Sounder (MS-DOS)
Initial release: 1991

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert HTK to SNDR?

HTK is limited to speech research tools. SNDR provides DOS sound variant that works with standard media players and applications.

What applications open SNDR files?

SOX and retro computing utilities can handle SNDR files. Most are available as free downloads for major operating systems.

How is the SNDR audio quality?

SNDR provides good quality at standard settings. The output clarity depends on the original HTK recording quality.

How fast is the conversion?

Both formats produce manageable file sizes. The HTK to SNDR conversion finishes almost instantly on our infrastructure.

Are my files kept private?

Uploaded HTK files are deleted immediately after conversion. SNDR results are automatically erased from our servers within 24 hours.

Does this work on mobile?

Yes. The converter runs in any browser — smartphones, tablets, and desktops all work for HTK to SNDR conversion.