SOU to AC3 Converter

Transform SOU recordings into AC3 quickly online

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Settings

The codec to encode the audio track. Codec "Without reencoding" copies the audio stream from the input file into output without re-encoding if possible.
Set the overall output AC3 (Dolby Digital) audio bitrate. If set to "Custom", the usable (and recommended) range is ≥160 kbps. The maximum bitrate is 640 kbps.
Set the number of audio channels. This setting is most useful when downmixing channels (e.g., from 5.1 to stereo).

sou

SOU is a raw audio format designation that functions as an alias for unsigned 8-bit PCM data (u8) in the SoX audio processing framework. Files with the .sou extension contain headerless, uncompressed audio samples stored as unsigned 8-bit integers — each byte represents a single amplitude value from 0 to 255, with 128 as the silence midpoint. Because there is no header, playback parameters such as sample rate and channel count must be specified externally. The default assumption is typically mono at 8000 Hz, though the data can represent any rate the recording hardware supported. The u8 encoding that SOU aliases is one of the simplest possible digital audio representations, predating structured audio containers like WAV and AIFF. Raw unsigned PCM was commonly produced by early sound cards and digitizers in the late 1980s and early 1990s, when storage constraints and limited processing power made headerless formats a practical choice. One advantage is absolute simplicity: SOU files can be read by any program capable of basic file I/O, with no parsing of container structures or metadata decoding required — useful for embedded systems, hardware diagnostics, and educational contexts where audio fundamentals are being explored. The format's minimal overhead also means that conversion to any modern container is lossless and instantaneous, since the raw PCM samples can be wrapped in a WAV or AIFF header without any transcoding.
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ac3

AC3 is the file format associated with Dolby Digital, a perceptual audio coding technology from Dolby Laboratories. This lossy format encodes up to 5.1 channels of surround sound (left, center, right, left surround, right surround, and LFE) into a bitstream typically ranging from 192 to 640 kbps. The algorithm applies a modified discrete cosine transform with psychoacoustic analysis to discard audio information below the threshold of human perception, producing compact files without obvious quality loss. AC3 became the mandatory audio standard for DVD-Video and is widely used in Blu-ray discs, digital television broadcasts (ATSC), and streaming delivery. A primary advantage is multichannel surround capability, bringing cinematic spatial audio into home theater systems. The format also maintains excellent dialogue clarity through its dedicated center channel, ideal for film and television content. Widespread hardware decoder support in receivers, TVs, and set-top boxes means AC3 audio plays back reliably across an enormous installed base of consumer electronics.
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Better Compatibility

Moving from SOU to AC3 transitions your audio from an obscure encoding to surround sound capability — a significant practical improvement.

Server-Side Processing

The heavy lifting happens in the cloud. Your computer stays responsive while SOU audio converts to AC3 on remote servers.

Rapid Conversion

Expect fast results — converting SOU to AC3 typically takes just a few seconds thanks to optimized server-side processing.

How to convert SOU to AC3

1

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

2

Choose ac3 or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your ac3 file right afterwards

About formats

SOU is a raw audio format designation that functions as an alias for unsigned 8-bit PCM data (u8) in the SoX audio processing framework. Files with the .sou extension contain headerless, uncompressed audio samples stored as unsigned 8-bit integers — each byte represents a single amplitude value from 0 to 255, with 128 as the silence midpoint. Because there is no header, playback parameters such as sample rate and channel count must be specified externally. The default assumption is typically mono at 8000 Hz, though the data can represent any rate the recording hardware supported. The u8 encoding that SOU aliases is one of the simplest possible digital audio representations, predating structured audio containers like WAV and AIFF. Raw unsigned PCM was commonly produced by early sound cards and digitizers in the late 1980s and early 1990s, when storage constraints and limited processing power made headerless formats a practical choice. One advantage is absolute simplicity: SOU files can be read by any program capable of basic file I/O, with no parsing of container structures or metadata decoding required — useful for embedded systems, hardware diagnostics, and educational contexts where audio fundamentals are being explored. The format's minimal overhead also means that conversion to any modern container is lossless and instantaneous, since the raw PCM samples can be wrapped in a WAV or AIFF header without any transcoding.
Developer: SoX Contributors
Initial release: 1991
AC3 is the file format associated with Dolby Digital, a perceptual audio coding technology from Dolby Laboratories. This lossy format encodes up to 5.1 channels of surround sound (left, center, right, left surround, right surround, and LFE) into a bitstream typically ranging from 192 to 640 kbps. The algorithm applies a modified discrete cosine transform with psychoacoustic analysis to discard audio information below the threshold of human perception, producing compact files without obvious quality loss. AC3 became the mandatory audio standard for DVD-Video and is widely used in Blu-ray discs, digital television broadcasts (ATSC), and streaming delivery. A primary advantage is multichannel surround capability, bringing cinematic spatial audio into home theater systems. The format also maintains excellent dialogue clarity through its dedicated center channel, ideal for film and television content. Widespread hardware decoder support in receivers, TVs, and set-top boxes means AC3 audio plays back reliably across an enormous installed base of consumer electronics.
Developer: Dolby Laboratories
Initial release: 1991

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert SOU to AC3?

Since SOU has bare PCM data requiring manual configuration to play back, switching to AC3 provides industry standard for cinema and Blu-ray.

How do I open a AC3 audio?

You can open AC3 with VLC, MPC-HC, PotPlayer, and home theater systems.

Will I lose audio quality converting SOU to AC3?

SOU stores voice at very low quality. Moving to AC3 makes the audio playable everywhere — quality stays consistent with the source.

Can I convert SOU to AC3 on any device?

Yes — the converter runs entirely in your browser, so it works on Windows, macOS, Linux, and mobile devices alike.

Can I convert multiple SOU recordings at once?

Yes — upload several SOU recordings simultaneously and they will all be converted to AC3 in parallel, saving you time.

Does SOU to AC3 conversion cost anything?

Standard conversions are available at no cost. Paid plans unlock higher limits and faster processing for heavy usage.