IIQ to WBMP Converter

Turn IIQ into WBMP online — instant conversion

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Shoot-Ready Batching

Upload an entire shoot of IIQ files at once. Batch conversion transforms all your Phase One captures simultaneously.

Fast Despite File Size

IIQ files are among the largest RAW formats. Our infrastructure processes them faster than you might expect from such big files.

Remote Heavy Lifting

Even 150MP IIQ files are processed on our infrastructure. Your device handles nothing — conversion happens entirely in the cloud.

How to convert IIQ to WBMP

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

IIQ (Intelligent Image Quality) is the proprietary RAW format developed by Phase One), a Danish manufacturer of medium-format digital camera systems and backs, introduced in 2008 with the P65+ digital back. IIQ files capture the unprocessed readout from Phase One's large-area CCD and CMOS sensors — ranging from 40 to 151 megapixels in current systems — at 16 bits per channel, preserving the full dynamic range, color depth, and spatial resolution of the sensor. The format comes in two variants: IIQ Large (IIQ L), which uses lossless compression for zero-quality-loss archival, and IIQ Small (IIQ S), which applies visually lossless compression to reduce file sizes by approximately 40-60% with negligible quality impact. Phase One's sensor calibration data, including per-pixel defect maps, fixed-pattern noise profiles, and factory color calibration, is embedded in the IIQ file, enabling precise correction during RAW development. One advantage is sheer resolving power and tonal depth: IIQ files from Phase One's flagship systems deliver the highest pixel counts and widest dynamic range available in commercial photography, making them the standard format for museum digitization, fine art reproduction, aerial surveying, and commercial advertising where maximum detail is non-negotiable. Tight integration with Capture One is another key strength — Phase One develops both the camera hardware and the RAW processing software, ensuring that IIQ files receive optimized demosaicing, color rendering, and lens correction tuned to each specific camera-lens combination.
Developer: Phase One
Initial release: 2008
WBMP (Wireless Bitmap) is a monochrome (1-bit, black and white) image format defined as part of the Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) specification, developed by the WAP Forum (later consolidated into the Open Mobile Alliance) around 1998. The format was designed for the extremely constrained mobile devices of the late 1990s and early 2000s — phones with small monochrome screens, minimal processing power, and narrow bandwidth GSM data connections. WBMP uses the simplest possible encoding: a type identifier byte (always 0 for the only defined type), width and height encoded as multi-byte integers using a variable-length scheme, and the raw pixel data where each bit represents one pixel (0 for white, 1 for black) packed eight per byte. There is no compression, no metadata, and no color — the format is purely a minimal container for delivering small monochrome graphics to WAP-era mobile browsers. One advantage was extreme efficiency on constrained devices — WBMP images could be decoded with virtually zero CPU overhead and minimal memory, critical on early mobile hardware running at single-digit megahertz clock speeds. The tiny file sizes are another strength: a typical WBMP icon occupied just a few hundred bytes, practical for transfer over 9.6 kbps GSM data channels. While the WAP ecosystem has been entirely superseded by modern mobile web browsers capable of rendering full-color JPEG, PNG, and WebP images, WBMP files remain encountered in archived mobile content from that transitional era.
Developer: WAP Forum
Initial release: 1998

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert IIQ to WBMP?

Phase One IIQ RAW files are too large and specialized for everyday use. Converting to WBMP produces practical files for sharing, editing, or publishing.

What opens WBMP?

IrfanView, XnView, GIMP, and specialized mobile development tools open WBMP files.

Will the image quality be preserved?

The converter extracts full quality from IIQ RAW data and renders it into WBMP with the best possible fidelity for the target format.

Do I need to install anything?

No installation at all. The IIQ to WBMP converter runs entirely in your web browser — just visit the page and start converting.

Is IIQ to WBMP conversion free?

Standard conversions are available at no cost. Premium plans add faster processing and higher limits for professional-volume work.