TOD to SOU Converter

Extract SOU raw audio from JVC TOD camcorder files

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Audio Extraction

Pull audio from JVC TOD camcorder recordings into SOU for raw PCM data handling.

Cloud Conversion

SOU extraction from TOD runs on our servers — no specialized software needed.

Secure Pipeline

TOD uploads are deleted post-processing. SOU output is purged within 24 hours.

How to convert TOD to SOU

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

TOD is a high-definition video recording format developed by JVC and introduced in 2007 with the Everio GZ-HD7 camcorder series. Serving as the HD counterpart to the standard-definition MOD format, TOD files contain MPEG-2 transport stream data with H.264/AVC video encoded at resolutions up to 1920x1080 interlaced, paired with AC-3 (Dolby Digital) audio. The format was developed as JVC transitioned its Everio camcorder line from standard definition to high definition, providing a recording format that balanced HD quality with practical file sizes for the hard disk drives and memory cards used as recording media. TOD files share structural similarities with the MPEG-2 transport stream used in broadcast applications, making them compatible with many professional and consumer video tools that handle transport stream content. JVC organized TOD recordings within a directory structure that includes metadata files for clip management, mirroring the approach used for MOD files but tailored to HD content parameters. The format records at bit rates sufficient for high-definition consumer video, typically ranging from 15 to 27 Mbps depending on the recording quality setting selected on the camera. While TOD is specific to JVC products and was eventually superseded by more widely adopted formats like AVCHD, it remains relevant for owners of JVC Everio HD camcorders who need to access, edit, or convert their recorded footage using modern video software.
Developer: JVC
Initial release: 2007
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

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert TOD to SOU?

SOU is built for raw PCM data handling. Extract audio from proprietary TOD into a purpose-built format.

What uses SOU files?

Systems and apps designed for raw PCM data handling accept SOU as their native audio format.

Is SOU widely compatible?

SOU is a specialized format. SOX and dedicated tools handle it; mainstream players may not.

Will the quality be adequate?

SOU quality suits its intended purpose. Output depends on the audio quality in your TOD source.

Can I batch convert?

Upload several TOD files and extract SOU audio from each simultaneously.