SPX to CVU Converter

Convert Speex voice recordings to unfiltered CVSD audio

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Raw Delta Audio

Get unfiltered CVSD output from your Speex recordings — ideal for telephony research and speech processing systems.

Instant Processing

Both SPX and CVU are compact voice formats. The conversion finishes nearly instantly.

Secure Processing

SPX uploads are erased after conversion. CVU files are deleted from servers within 24 hours.

How to convert SPX to CVU

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

Speex is an open-source audio codec purpose-built for speech compression, developed by Jean-Marc Valin under the Xiph.Org Foundation. First released in October 2002, it targets voice-over-IP, conferencing, and any scenario where spoken word needs to travel efficiently over a network. SPX files wrap Speex-encoded audio inside an Ogg container, pairing the codec's speech optimization with Ogg's streaming capabilities. Three sampling rates are supported — narrowband at 8 kHz, wideband at 16 kHz, and ultra-wideband at 32 kHz — along with variable bitrate encoding that adapts in real time to speech complexity. A standout advantage is its patent-free, BSD-licensed nature, which allowed developers to embed it freely in both commercial and open-source products. Speex also bundles acoustic echo cancellation, noise suppression, and automatic gain control, features that rival codecs typically delegate to external libraries. Although its creators officially recommend Opus as a successor since 2012, Speex remains deployed in legacy VoIP systems, archived recordings, and embedded devices where its lightweight decoder footprint is still valued.
Initial release: October 15, 2002
CVU is an unsigned variant of the CVS telephony audio format, differing in how delta-encoded values are represented in the binary stream. While CVS stores slope delta values as signed quantities, CVU treats them as unsigned, shifting the numerical interpretation of each sample. Both share the underlying CVSD modulation technique — 1-bit adaptive delta coding where step size varies according to recent output bit patterns — operating at comparable rates, typically 16 kbps for narrowband voice at 8 kHz. The signed-versus-unsigned distinction matters at the decoder, where correct interpretation determines proper waveform reconstruction. CVU files appear in telephony and embedded communication contexts where hardware adopted the unsigned convention. A practical advantage is straightforward interfacing with systems using unsigned arithmetic natively, avoiding sign extension in decoders. Like its signed counterpart, CVU achieves extreme bandwidth efficiency, compressing voice into compact bitstreams for constrained links. SoX supports CVU, providing a reliable path for converting these niche telephony recordings into modern formats for analysis or archival.
Developer: CCITT / ITU-T
Initial release: 1970

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert SPX to CVU?

CVU provides unfiltered CVSD audio for raw telephony processing pipelines that apply their own filtering stages.

How is CVU different from CVSD?

CVU is unfiltered CVSD — the audio is not post-processed, giving downstream systems full control over filtering.

What uses CVU files?

Telephony research platforms, speech processing pipelines, and systems that require raw delta-modulated input use CVU.

Is CVU suitable for playback?

CVU is meant for processing, not casual listening. Convert to WAV for standard audio playback.

Is the conversion free?

Yes — free on convertio.tools for standard usage.