MP2 to SND Converter

Re-encode MP2 radio tracks into vintage SND online

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MP2 to SND Made Easy

Go from MP2 to SND with a few clicks. Upload, select the output format, and download your converted audio.

Easy Interface

A clean, guided interface walks you through the conversion. No audio expertise required — just upload and download.

No Expertise Needed

Designed for everyone — from beginners to professionals. The intuitive workflow requires no prior audio knowledge.

How to convert MP2 to SND

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

MP2 (MPEG-1 Audio Layer II), also known by its original project name MUSICAM, is a perceptual audio codec standardized as part of ISO/IEC 11172-3 in 1993. While its successor MP3 captured the consumer spotlight, MP2 carved out a durable niche in professional broadcasting that it holds to this day. The codec splits audio into 32 sub-bands via a polyphase filter bank, applies a psychoacoustic model to determine masking thresholds, then quantizes and Huffman-codes each sub-band accordingly. Typical broadcast deployments use 192-384 kbps for stereo, yielding transparent quality with lower encoder complexity and better error resilience than Layer III. These properties explain why DVB television, DAB digital radio, and the HDV camcorder standard all mandate or prefer MP2. Encoder latency is shorter too, an important trait for live broadcasting where lip-sync matters. Three advantages keep MP2 relevant decades after standardization: graceful degradation under transmission errors vital for over-the-air signals, minimal encoding delay that suits real-time broadcast chains, and entrenched regulatory acceptance across European and Asian broadcast frameworks.
Initial release: 1993
SND is a multi-platform audio file extension used across several computing ecosystems since the late 1980s. On Sun and NeXT workstations, .snd files follow the AU format structure — a header with magic number 0x2e736e64, data offset, encoding type, sample rate, and channel count, followed by raw audio. On MS-DOS PCs, the same .snd extension was used by early sound utilities like Sounder and SoundTool for simple 8-bit unsigned PCM recordings. Macintosh systems also employed .snd for sound resources embedded in the resource fork. Because the extension is shared across incompatible formats, audio processing tools typically inspect the file header to determine which variant they are handling: files beginning with the AU magic number are treated as Sun/NeXT audio, while headerless files are interpreted as raw PCM with assumed parameters. The Sun/NeXT variant supports multiple encodings including mu-law, A-law, 8-bit and 16-bit linear PCM, and ADPCM, making it versatile for both speech and general audio. One advantage of the AU-style SND is its self-describing header, which enables any compliant player to determine sample format and rate without external metadata. The MS-DOS SND variants hold historical value as artifacts of the era when Sound Blaster cards first brought digital audio to personal computers. SND files from all platforms can be processed and converted using SoX and other audio tools.
Initial release: 1988

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert MP2 to SND?

MP2 radio recordings can be converted to SND when working with older systems or hardware that requires this specific format.

What programs can open SND?

You can play SND using SoX, Audacity, and legacy DOS/Unix audio utilities.

What happens to audio quality during conversion?

SND has format-specific limitations. The converter decodes your MP2 and re-encodes within SND capabilities — results vary by format.

Can I convert multiple MP2 tracks at once?

Yes — upload several MP2 files and convert them all to SND in a single batch. No need to process each one individually.

Is the conversion private?

Yes — your MP2 is removed from our servers right after processing. SND output files are automatically deleted within 24 hours.