PVF to IMA Converter

Transcode PVF audio to IMA ADPCM format online

Drop files here. 1 GB maximum file size or Sign Up
to
Facebook Amazon Microsoft Tesla Nestle Walmart L'Oreal

Telephony to IMA

Transform PVF recordings into IMA — bringing voice-optimized audio into a format with real-world usability.

Any Platform

Convert from any device with a browser — desktops, laptops, tablets, and smartphones all work perfectly.

Data Security

Your PVF files are erased immediately after processing. IMA results are cleaned from our servers within 24 hours.

How to convert PVF to IMA

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

PVF (Portable Voice Format) is a simple audio file format designed for voice message storage in Linux-based telephony systems, most notably ISDN4Linux and its vbox voicemail application. The format emerged from the European ISDN ecosystem of the late 1990s, when Linux servers increasingly handled PBX and answering machine duties over digital phone lines. PVF files store raw signed 16-bit PCM samples at 8000 Hz mono, preceded by a minimal plain-text header specifying data format and byte ordering. This deliberate simplicity is one of the format's primary strengths — with no compression and a human-readable header, PVF files are trivially easy to parse, pipe, and manipulate using standard Unix tools. The 8 kHz rate matches the Nyquist requirement for telephone-bandwidth speech (300-3400 Hz), making PVF a natural intermediate format for voice processing pipelines. Another advantage is cross-architecture portability: the explicit byte-order declaration means PVF files move between big-endian and little-endian systems without ambiguity. The SoX audio toolkit provides native PVF read/write support, enabling straightforward conversion to modern formats.
Developer: ISDN4Linux Project
Initial release: 1997
IMA ADPCM (Adaptive Differential Pulse-Code Modulation) is a compact audio coding standard published by the Interactive Multimedia Association in 1992, addressing the need for a lightweight, royalty-free compression scheme suitable for early multimedia PCs and embedded devices. The algorithm encodes each sample as a 4-bit nibble representing the quantized difference from the previous sample, while an adaptive step-size table adjusts dynamically to track signal amplitude — delivering a fixed 4:1 compression ratio over 16-bit PCM. Decoding requires only an integer multiply-add per sample and a small lookup table, so even modest 1990s CPUs could decompress in real time without dedicated DSP. The format became deeply embedded in the multimedia landscape: Microsoft adopted it as a standard ACM codec for WAV files, game engines relied on it for sound effects, and telephony equipment used it for voice storage. Its advantages are enduring: predictable 4:1 size reduction simplifies buffer allocation in constrained environments, the decode path runs on 8-bit microcontrollers, and the open specification made IMA ADPCM one of the most broadly implemented audio codecs in computing history.
Initial release: 1992

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert PVF to IMA?

PVF is a niche telephony voice format. IMA gives your voice recordings broader compatibility with standard players and tools.

What applications open IMA files?

Gaming/embedded systems and SOX can handle IMA files. Most are available as free downloads for major operating systems.

How is the IMA audio quality?

IMA provides good quality at standard settings. The output clarity depends on the original PVF recording quality.

How fast is the conversion?

Processing is fast — PVF files are lightweight and IMA encoding completes in seconds on our server hardware.

Are my files kept private?

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