SNDR to AMR Converter

Convert your SNDR sound files to AMR format

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Settings

The AMR audio codec supports various bit rates ranging from 4.75 to 12.2 kbit/s with toll quality speech starting at 7.4 kbit/s.
Set the number of audio channels. This setting is most useful when downmixing channels (e.g., from 5.1 to stereo).
Set the sample rate of the audio. Music with a full spectrum (20 Hz — 20 kHz) requires values not lower than 44.1 kHz to achieve transparency. More info can be found on the wiki.

sndr

SNDR is the audio file format produced by Sounder, an early MS-DOS sound recording and playback utility from the early 1990s. Before Windows brought multimedia to the mainstream, Sounder was among a handful of DOS programs that let PC users capture and play audio through rudimentary hardware — often the PC speaker itself or early 8-bit sound cards. The format stores 8-bit unsigned PCM samples without any file header, relying on application defaults to determine playback parameters. Sample rates were typically low (4000 to 11025 Hz), reflecting hardware limits and storage costs when a 20 MB hard drive was considered generous. One practical advantage was absolute minimalism — with zero overhead bytes, every bit of the file was audio data, which mattered when storage was measured in kilobytes. The format could be piped directly to sound hardware without parsing, making real-time playback feasible on slow processors. Despite its simplicity, SNDR holds a place in computing history as one of the formats that brought digital audio to ordinary PCs. Files from this era occasionally surface in retrocomputing archives. SoX and ffmpeg can interpret SNDR files given the correct parameters, enabling preservation of early digital audio recordings.
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amr

AMR (Adaptive Multi-Rate) is a compressed audio format optimized for speech, standardized by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute and adopted as a mandatory codec for GSM and 3G mobile networks. The codec dynamically switches between eight bit rates — from 4.75 to 12.2 kbps — depending on network conditions and background noise levels. When link quality drops, the encoder shifts to a lower rate, trading marginal clarity for transmission reliability. This adaptive mechanism is defined by the 3GPP specifications and represents one of the most widely deployed voice codecs globally, used in billions of mobile calls. The primary advantage is compression efficiency: one minute of AMR audio at 12.2 kbps occupies roughly 90 KB, practical for voice memos, voicemail, and MMS on bandwidth-constrained networks. Another benefit is built-in voice activity detection and comfort noise generation, reducing transmission during silence. While AMR is unsuitable for music due to its narrow bandwidth (300-3400 Hz), it excels at delivering intelligible speech under challenging network conditions.
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Works Everywhere

Access the SNDR to AMR converter from any device with a web browser. No platform-specific software needed to get started.

Accurate Conversion

Audio from SNDR transfers to AMR without unnecessary degradation. The converter respects source encoding and reproduces it faithfully.

Cloud Processing

SNDR to AMR conversion runs entirely on cloud servers. Your device stays fast and responsive — no CPU or memory consumed locally.

How to convert SNDR to AMR

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

SNDR is the audio file format produced by Sounder, an early MS-DOS sound recording and playback utility from the early 1990s. Before Windows brought multimedia to the mainstream, Sounder was among a handful of DOS programs that let PC users capture and play audio through rudimentary hardware — often the PC speaker itself or early 8-bit sound cards. The format stores 8-bit unsigned PCM samples without any file header, relying on application defaults to determine playback parameters. Sample rates were typically low (4000 to 11025 Hz), reflecting hardware limits and storage costs when a 20 MB hard drive was considered generous. One practical advantage was absolute minimalism — with zero overhead bytes, every bit of the file was audio data, which mattered when storage was measured in kilobytes. The format could be piped directly to sound hardware without parsing, making real-time playback feasible on slow processors. Despite its simplicity, SNDR holds a place in computing history as one of the formats that brought digital audio to ordinary PCs. Files from this era occasionally surface in retrocomputing archives. SoX and ffmpeg can interpret SNDR files given the correct parameters, enabling preservation of early digital audio recordings.
Developer: Sounder (MS-DOS)
Initial release: 1991
AMR (Adaptive Multi-Rate) is a compressed audio format optimized for speech, standardized by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute and adopted as a mandatory codec for GSM and 3G mobile networks. The codec dynamically switches between eight bit rates — from 4.75 to 12.2 kbps — depending on network conditions and background noise levels. When link quality drops, the encoder shifts to a lower rate, trading marginal clarity for transmission reliability. This adaptive mechanism is defined by the 3GPP specifications and represents one of the most widely deployed voice codecs globally, used in billions of mobile calls. The primary advantage is compression efficiency: one minute of AMR audio at 12.2 kbps occupies roughly 90 KB, practical for voice memos, voicemail, and MMS on bandwidth-constrained networks. Another benefit is built-in voice activity detection and comfort noise generation, reducing transmission during silence. While AMR is unsuitable for music due to its narrow bandwidth (300-3400 Hz), it excels at delivering intelligible speech under challenging network conditions.
Initial release: 1999

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert SNDR to AMR?

SNDR is a legacy DOS-era format with virtually no modern software support. AMR is optimized for speech recording on mobile devices and widely used for voice memos and telephony applications.

How do I open AMR files?

Open AMR with VLC, QuickTime, or mobile-compatible players. These tools handle the format natively and provide reliable playback.

Does the converter work with damaged recordings?

The converter reads whatever audio data is available in the SNDR file. Severely corrupted sections may not transfer, but valid data converts.

Is my data encrypted during transfer?

All uploads and downloads use encrypted HTTPS connections. Your SNDR audio and the resulting AMR output are protected throughout the process.

Can I convert multiple SNDR recordings at once?

Yes — upload several SNDR files and convert them all to AMR simultaneously. Batch conversion saves significant time on collections.

Will audio quality degrade during conversion?

Quality depends on the target codec. Lossless formats keep every sample from your SNDR source. Lossy codecs apply minimal compression.