SPH to AU Converter

High-fidelity SPH to AU conversion tool

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Group Mode

Process entire sets of SPH files to AU in one pass. Batch conversion handles multiple uploads efficiently.

Data Protected

Uploaded SPH files are wiped immediately after processing. Resulting AU outputs are deleted automatically within 24 hours.

Clean Output

Converting SPH to AU maintains your recording quality. The engine handles speech audio data with precision and accuracy.

How to convert SPH to AU

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

SPH is the file extension for audio stored in the NIST SPHERE (SPeech HEader REsources) format, a standard created by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology around 1990. Built for speech research, SPH files carry a 1024-byte ASCII header packed with metadata — database identifiers, channel counts, sample rates, byte ordering, and compression type — making every recording self-describing. The underlying audio is typically 16-bit linear PCM sampled at 16 kHz, though other configurations are permitted. Researchers at NIST, DARPA, and universities worldwide rely on SPH for distributing speech corpora such as TIMIT, Switchboard, and the LDC collections that underpin modern automatic speech recognition systems. A key advantage is that the human-readable header lets scripts parse recording metadata without binary decoding. The format's strict standardization also eliminates ambiguity when sharing datasets across institutions and platforms. Because SPH files store uncompressed PCM, they preserve full audio fidelity — critical when training acoustic models where even small artifacts can skew results.
Initial release: 1990
AU is an audio file format introduced by Sun Microsystems for its Unix workstations and the NeXT platform. It features a minimal 24-byte header specifying data offset, size, encoding type, sample rate, and channel count, followed by the audio payload. AU supports numerous encodings, including uncompressed linear PCM at various bit depths, mu-law and A-law companding (logarithmic compression used in telephone systems), and several ADPCM variants. This versatility made AU a workhorse across early Unix environments, web audio (Java applets defaulted to AU), and telephony applications. One advantage is simplicity: the compact header and straightforward structure make it trivial to parse, generate, and stream programmatically. The built-in mu-law option provides another benefit, delivering reasonable voice quality at just 8 KB per second — half the rate of 16-bit uncompressed audio — invaluable when storage and bandwidth were scarce. Although modern formats have largely supplanted AU in consumer applications, it retains a foothold in scientific computing and audio processing pipelines where minimal overhead and reliable cross-platform behavior are valued.
Developer: Sun Microsystems
Initial release: 1992

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert SPH to AU?

SPH has narrow tool support limited to speech labs. AU is the established Sun/NeXT format supported by Audacity, VLC, and Java.

What can open AU audio?

Open AU with Audacity, VLC, SoX, or UNIX-based audio tools and Java audio APIs.

Is SPH to AU conversion lossless?

For lossless targets like WAV or FLAC, yes. For lossy AU, the codec applies compression but quality remains high at decent bitrates.

Can I convert many SPH files to AU in one batch?

You can process multiple SPH to AU conversions together. Upload all files, select the target, and convert in one batch.

How secure is SPH to AU conversion?

Very secure. Uploaded SPH data is deleted once conversion ends, and AU files are removed from our servers within 24 hours.

Does the SPH to AU converter need installation?

No — the converter operates entirely online. Open the page, upload your SPH file, and download the AU output. No plugins required.