SMP to IMA Converter

Compress Turtle Beach SMP samples with IMA ADPCM encoding

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ADPCM Encoding

Compress SMP samples with IMA ADPCM — the industry-standard adaptive codec for compact audio storage.

4:1 Compression

IMA ADPCM achieves 4:1 compression while keeping voice quality intact — efficient for your SMP samples.

Private Processing

Your SMP files are erased after processing. IMA outputs purged from servers within 24 hours.

How to convert SMP 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

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
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 SMP to IMA?

IMA ADPCM is a standard adaptive compression codec. Converting SMP to IMA creates compact files for embedded and multimedia use.

What opens IMA files?

Telephony systems, embedded devices, gaming platforms, and multimedia applications use IMA ADPCM audio.

How much does IMA compress?

IMA ADPCM reduces files to about 25% of raw PCM size — a strong balance between quality and compression for voice content.

Can I convert multiple SMP files at once?

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

Is the conversion secure?

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