RGF to JP2 Converter

Free RGF to JP2 image conversion service

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Fast Results

RGF to JP2 conversion completes in seconds. Upload your file, and the result is ready to download almost immediately.

One-Click Retrieval

Download your JP2 result as soon as the conversion ends. The output stays available for a full day if you need to grab it later.

Private and Secure

Your RGF files are deleted right after conversion, and JP2 outputs are erased within 24 hours. Your data remains entirely confidential.

How to convert RGF to JP2

1

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

2

Choose jp2 or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your jp2 file right afterwards

About formats

RGF (Robot Graphics Format) is a simple monochrome bitmap image format used by LEGO Mindstorms EV3 programmable robotics kits, introduced with the EV3 system on September 1, 2013. RGF files store 1-bit (black and white) images designed for display on the EV3 Intelligent Brick's 178x128 pixel monochrome LCD screen. The format uses a minimal structure: a header containing the image width and height as binary values, followed by the pixel data where each bit represents one pixel (1 for black, 0 for white), packed eight per byte in row-major order. RGF images are used as custom display graphics in EV3 programs — students and hobbyists create them for robot status displays, user interfaces, splash screens, and animation frames shown on the brick's screen during program execution. The images are typically designed using LEGO's EV3 software (which includes a built-in image editor) or converted from other formats using community tools. RGF fits within LEGO's broader educational robotics platform, where the Mindstorms system teaches programming, engineering, and computational thinking to students worldwide. One advantage is the format's role in educational technology: RGF provides a simple, concrete example of how digital images are represented as binary data — a concept that students working with Mindstorms can directly observe by examining the file contents and seeing the corresponding image on the brick's screen. The format's simplicity makes it accessible for young programmers learning about file formats and binary data. RGF files can be created and converted using ImageMagick, the EV3 development environment, and community tools like ev3dev.
Developer: The LEGO Group
Initial release: 2013
JP2 (JPEG 2000 Part 1) is an image format based on the JPEG 2000 compression standard, developed by the Joint Photographic Experts Group and published as ISO/IEC 15444-1 in December 2000 as the successor to the original JPEG standard. Unlike JPEG's block-based discrete cosine transform, JPEG 2000 uses discrete wavelet transform (DWT) compression, which eliminates the characteristic 8x8 block artifacts visible in highly compressed JPEG images and instead produces a smooth, gradual quality degradation. The format supports both lossy and lossless compression within the same codestream, along with features absent from original JPEG: 16-bit and higher bit-depth images, arbitrary numbers of color channels, alpha transparency, region-of-interest coding (allocating more bits to important areas), and progressive quality or resolution refinement from a single compressed stream. One advantage is superior image quality at low bit rates — JPEG 2000 produces visibly cleaner images than JPEG at equivalent file sizes, particularly below 0.5 bits per pixel where JPEG exhibits severe blocking. The progressive decoding capability is another strength: a single JP2 file can be decoded at any resolution or quality level without encoding multiple versions, valuable for remote sensing and medical imaging where the same image must serve both thumbnail browsing and full-resolution analysis. JP2 is the mandated format for digital cinema (DCI), the preferred format in geospatial data (GeoJP2), and widely adopted in cultural heritage digitization.
Initial release: December 2000

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert RGF to JP2?

Most image tools cannot open RGF files directly. JP2 output lets you view, edit, and distribute images from educational robotics easily.

What programs open JP2 files?

You can open JP2 files with any standard image viewer. Windows Photo Viewer, macOS Preview, GIMP, and web browsers all support JP2.

What makes RGF files distinctive?

RGF images are extremely small monochrome graphics — designed to fit on a tiny LEGO robot LCD screen. They represent a unique niche in imaging.

What happens to uploaded files?

Your RGF files are processed on secure servers, then deleted automatically. Converted JP2 files are available for 24 hours, then erased.

Does converting RGF to JP2 lose quality?

Conversion preserves the quality present in the RGF original. Any limitations come from the source resolution, not from the conversion step.