SMP to GSM Converter

Compress Turtle Beach SMP audio using GSM voice codec

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Mobile Voice Standard

Convert SMP samples using the GSM codec — the voice compression standard behind global mobile telephony.

Ultra-Compact Files

GSM produces remarkably small files — about 1.6 kB per second of speech, ideal for storage efficiency.

Private Processing

Your SMP files are erased after processing. GSM outputs deleted from servers within 24 hours.

How to convert SMP to GSM

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

SMP is the native file format of SampleVision, a sample editing application developed by Turtle Beach Systems around 1990. SampleVision was among the first PC-based visual sample editors, letting musicians view waveforms on screen and perform cut, copy, paste, and loop-point editing — capabilities previously limited to expensive dedicated hardware samplers. The SMP format stores 16-bit mono PCM audio along with sampling-specific metadata: loop start and end points, sustain loops, release loops, and MIDI root note assignments. This made SMP files directly useful for creating and exchanging patches between hardware samplers via MIDI Sample Dump Standard (SDS) transfers, which SampleVision automated through its interface. A primary advantage was bridging the PC world with professional sampling hardware from Akai, E-mu, Ensoniq, and Roland — devices that had tiny screens and minimal editing tools. The format also supported common sample rates (22050, 44100 Hz) and brief text descriptions alongside audio data. Though Turtle Beach pivoted to gaming peripherals and SampleVision was discontinued, SMP files persist in vintage sample library archives and can be converted using SoX.
Initial release: 1990
GSM 06.10 (Full Rate) is the foundational speech codec of the Global System for Mobile Communications standard, ratified by ETSI in 1991 and deployed across hundreds of cellular networks worldwide. Operating at a fixed 13 kbit/s, the algorithm applies Regular Pulse Excitation with Long-Term Prediction (RPE-LTP) to compress 20 ms frames of 8 kHz mono speech into just 33 bytes each. This approach models the vocal tract as a linear predictive filter, encodes the excitation signal, and leverages pitch periodicity for further reduction — tuned to deliver intelligible voice under the bandwidth constraints of early digital mobile channels. The codec powers not only GSM telephony but also many VoIP applications, voicemail systems, and IVR platforms that benefit from its low bitrate. Three concrete advantages stand out. First, extraordinary compression: one minute of speech fits in roughly 100 KB, enabling efficient storage and transmission. Second, universal tooling — libraries such as libgsm and SoX handle encoding and decoding on every major platform. Third, a royalty-free patent landscape that has encouraged adoption across open-source telephony projects like Asterisk and FreeSWITCH.
Initial release: 1991

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert SMP to GSM?

GSM is the voice codec powering global mobile telephony. Converting SMP to GSM creates ultra-compressed voice files for mobile use.

What opens GSM files?

VLC, SoX, Audacity, and VoIP systems can decode and play GSM compressed audio files.

Is GSM suitable for music?

No — GSM is designed for speech only. For music samples from SMP, consider MP3, OGG, or FLAC instead.

Can I convert multiple SMP files at once?

Upload a batch of SMP samples and convert them all to GSM simultaneously — efficient for processing entire libraries.

Is the conversion secure?

SMP uploads are deleted after processing, and GSM outputs are removed from our servers within 24 hours.