TTA to CVU Converter

Transform True Audio into CVU mu-law format online

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Phone Standard

CVU uses mu-law encoding — the North American telephony standard. Lossless TTA gives you clean voice input.

Web-Based

No telephony SDKs needed — convert TTA to CVU entirely through your browser.

Secure Processing

TTA files are erased immediately. CVU outputs are deleted within 24 hours.

How to convert TTA 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

TTA (True Audio) is a real-time lossless audio compression codec developed by Aleksander Djourik, with its origins tracing back to the early 2000s. The format reconstructs the original PCM stream bit-for-bit upon decoding, guaranteeing that no sonic detail is lost during storage or transfer. TTA handles standard CD-quality audio as well as high-resolution content up to 32-bit integer samples, making it suitable for everyday listening and professional archiving alike. Processing speed is one of TTA's defining strengths — the codec achieves fast encoding and decoding without heavy CPU demands, keeping it lightweight even on older hardware. The file structure supports ID3v1, ID3v2, and APEv2 metadata tags, so track information and album art travel with the audio. Hardware support appeared in several portable players, giving TTA a practical edge over some competing lossless formats. The open-source reference implementation ships under the GNU GPL, encouraging community adoption and third-party integrations. While newer codecs like FLAC have captured a larger share of the lossless audio landscape, TTA continues to serve users who value its simplicity and transparent compression.
Developer: Aleksander Djourik
Initial release: 2003
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

What is CVU?

CVU uses mu-law encoding — the standard for digital voice on North American and Japanese telephone networks.

Why convert TTA to CVU?

North American telephony and IVR systems need mu-law audio. Lossless TTA gives clean voice recordings for the conversion.

What processes CVU?

SoX, Asterisk PBX, and telephony frameworks support CVU for voice processing.

How is mu-law different from a-law?

Mu-law serves North America and Japan; a-law serves Europe. Both compress voice for phone networks.

Is it secure?

TTA uploads are deleted right after conversion. CVU results are removed within 24 hours.