TS to SND Converter

Extract SND Audio audio from TS recordings online

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Specialized Output

SND serves SND format for classic Macintosh and Unix systems. Extract the exact format your workflow requires from TS sources.

Cloud Processing

Extraction runs on our servers — no specialized tools needed on your machine.

Secure Handling

Uploaded TS files are deleted after conversion. SND outputs are removed within 24 hours.

How to convert TS to SND

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

TS (MPEG Transport Stream) is a standard container format specified as part of the MPEG-2 systems layer (ISO/IEC 13818-1), standardized by the Moving Picture Experts Group in 1995. Transport streams are designed for communication and storage environments where data loss or corruption is possible, such as broadcast television, satellite transmission, and network streaming. The format divides content into fixed-size 188-byte packets, each carrying a 4-byte header with synchronization, error indication, and stream identification information. This packet structure enables receivers to rapidly resynchronize after signal interruptions, a critical capability for real-time broadcast delivery that distinguishes transport streams from program streams designed for reliable storage media. TS can multiplex multiple programs into a single stream, with Program Specific Information (PSI) tables describing the structure and content of each program. The format supports virtually any audio and video codec, though it most commonly carries MPEG-2 video, H.264, or HEVC alongside AAC, AC-3, or MPEG audio. TS is the backbone of digital television delivery worldwide, used by DVB, ATSC, and ISDB broadcasting standards as well as IPTV and OTT streaming services utilizing HTTP Live Streaming (HLS). Resilience, standardized structure, and broad codec support make TS equally at home in live broadcast chains and file-based recording workflows.
Initial release: 1995
SND is a multi-platform audio file extension used across several computing ecosystems since the late 1980s. On Sun and NeXT workstations, .snd files follow the AU format structure — a header with magic number 0x2e736e64, data offset, encoding type, sample rate, and channel count, followed by raw audio. On MS-DOS PCs, the same .snd extension was used by early sound utilities like Sounder and SoundTool for simple 8-bit unsigned PCM recordings. Macintosh systems also employed .snd for sound resources embedded in the resource fork. Because the extension is shared across incompatible formats, audio processing tools typically inspect the file header to determine which variant they are handling: files beginning with the AU magic number are treated as Sun/NeXT audio, while headerless files are interpreted as raw PCM with assumed parameters. The Sun/NeXT variant supports multiple encodings including mu-law, A-law, 8-bit and 16-bit linear PCM, and ADPCM, making it versatile for both speech and general audio. One advantage of the AU-style SND is its self-describing header, which enables any compliant player to determine sample format and rate without external metadata. The MS-DOS SND variants hold historical value as artifacts of the era when Sound Blaster cards first brought digital audio to personal computers. SND files from all platforms can be processed and converted using SoX and other audio tools.
Initial release: 1988

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert TS to SND?

SND provides SND format for classic Macintosh and Unix systems. Converting extracts compatible audio data from your TS broadcast recordings.

What software handles SND?

Specialized audio tools, SoX, and format-specific applications handle SND files for playback and processing.

Is SND widely supported?

SND serves specific use cases. For general audio, MP3, WAV, or FLAC are more broadly compatible.

Can I adjust settings?

Yes — configure sample rate and encoding parameters before converting to match your target system.

Is batch conversion available?

Upload multiple TS files and extract SND audio from each simultaneously in one session.