TAK to CAF Converter

Transform TAK audio into Apple CAF container 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 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.

tak

TAK (Tom's lossless Audio Kompressor) is a high-performance lossless audio codec created by German developer Thomas Becker, with the first public release arriving in 2007. Originally called YALAC, the project was renamed before launch and quickly earned recognition for delivering compression ratios that rival or exceed FLAC while decoding noticeably faster. TAK supports PCM audio up to 24-bit depth and 192 kHz sample rate, covering everything from CD-quality to high-resolution studio masters. One of its strongest selling points is encoding speed: even at maximum compression, TAK encodes faster than most competing lossless codecs at their default settings. The decoder is similarly efficient, making real-time playback straightforward on modest hardware. Error detection through CRC-32 checksums ensures bit-perfect integrity, important for archival purposes. TAK also supports embedded cue sheets and APEv2 tags for organizing multi-track albums. The primary trade-off is that TAK remains closed-source and Windows-only, limiting cross-platform adoption. For users who prioritize compression efficiency and speed on Windows systems, TAK stands among the best lossless options available.
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caf

CAF (Core Audio Format) is a flexible audio container developed by Apple and introduced with Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger in 2005. Built to overcome limitations of older formats, CAF eliminates the 4 GB file size ceiling that constrains WAV and AIFF, theoretically supporting unlimited length. The container accommodates virtually any codec — AAC, ALAC, MP3, linear PCM, IMA ADPCM, and more — within a unified wrapper. Its chunk-based architecture stores audio alongside rich metadata including channel layouts, marker regions, annotations, and MIDI data. A defining advantage is handling extremely long recordings: broadcasters and field recordists can capture hours of continuous audio without size boundaries. Flexible codec support is another strength, as one container works whether the content is high-resolution 24-bit/192 kHz lossless audio or compressed speech. Apple's Core Audio framework provides native support on macOS and iOS, ensuring low-latency playback in professional applications like Logic Pro and Final Cut Pro. For Apple ecosystem workflows requiring both versatility and scale, CAF is an exceptionally capable choice.
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Apple Development

CAF is essential for iOS and macOS audio development — converting from TAK lets you prepare assets for Apple platforms.

Flexible Container

Unlike WAV or AIFF, CAF supports files over 4 GB and multiple audio codecs — TAK to CAF unlocks Apple-specific capabilities.

Private Processing

Your TAK files are erased immediately after conversion. CAF results are purged from servers within 24 hours.

How to convert TAK to CAF

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

TAK (Tom's lossless Audio Kompressor) is a high-performance lossless audio codec created by German developer Thomas Becker, with the first public release arriving in 2007. Originally called YALAC, the project was renamed before launch and quickly earned recognition for delivering compression ratios that rival or exceed FLAC while decoding noticeably faster. TAK supports PCM audio up to 24-bit depth and 192 kHz sample rate, covering everything from CD-quality to high-resolution studio masters. One of its strongest selling points is encoding speed: even at maximum compression, TAK encodes faster than most competing lossless codecs at their default settings. The decoder is similarly efficient, making real-time playback straightforward on modest hardware. Error detection through CRC-32 checksums ensures bit-perfect integrity, important for archival purposes. TAK also supports embedded cue sheets and APEv2 tags for organizing multi-track albums. The primary trade-off is that TAK remains closed-source and Windows-only, limiting cross-platform adoption. For users who prioritize compression efficiency and speed on Windows systems, TAK stands among the best lossless options available.
Developer: Thomas Becker
Initial release: 2007
CAF (Core Audio Format) is a flexible audio container developed by Apple and introduced with Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger in 2005. Built to overcome limitations of older formats, CAF eliminates the 4 GB file size ceiling that constrains WAV and AIFF, theoretically supporting unlimited length. The container accommodates virtually any codec — AAC, ALAC, MP3, linear PCM, IMA ADPCM, and more — within a unified wrapper. Its chunk-based architecture stores audio alongside rich metadata including channel layouts, marker regions, annotations, and MIDI data. A defining advantage is handling extremely long recordings: broadcasters and field recordists can capture hours of continuous audio without size boundaries. Flexible codec support is another strength, as one container works whether the content is high-resolution 24-bit/192 kHz lossless audio or compressed speech. Apple's Core Audio framework provides native support on macOS and iOS, ensuring low-latency playback in professional applications like Logic Pro and Final Cut Pro. For Apple ecosystem workflows requiring both versatility and scale, CAF is an exceptionally capable choice.
Developer: Apple Inc.
Initial release: 2005

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert TAK to CAF?

CAF is Apple's native audio container for macOS and iOS development. It supports large file sizes and multiple codecs that AIFF and WAV cannot handle.

What is CAF used for?

Core Audio Format is used in iOS app development, macOS system sounds, and professional Apple audio workflows that need flexible container features.

Does CAF work on Windows?

VLC plays CAF on Windows. For native playback, CAF is primarily a macOS/iOS format — use WAV or FLAC for cross-platform needs.

Is there quality loss in conversion?

No — CAF can hold uncompressed or lossless audio. Converting from lossless TAK preserves full audio fidelity in the CAF container.

Is my audio data secure?

TAK uploads are removed immediately after conversion. CAF outputs are deleted from our servers within 24 hours.