VQF to HTK Converter

Decode TwinVQ VQF into HTK speech online

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Format Rescue

Decode dead TwinVQ audio into functional HTK — rescue your files before VQF decoders become completely unavailable.

Online Decoding

No abandoned TwinVQ player software needed — our servers decode VQF and encode HTK through your browser.

Secure Processing

VQF uploads are erased immediately. HTK outputs are purged from servers within 24 hours.

How to convert VQF to HTK

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

VQF is the file extension for audio encoded with TwinVQ (Transform-domain Weighted Interleave Vector Quantization), a lossy compression technology developed by NTT (Nippon Telegraph and Telephone) in 1994 and later commercialized by Yamaha under the SoundVQ brand. The codec claimed a 30 to 35 percent size advantage over MP3 at equivalent perceptual quality — a 96 kbps VQF file was said to match a 128 kbps MP3 — generating considerable excitement during the late-1990s format wars. TwinVQ supports constant bitrate encoding at 80, 96, 112, 128, 160, and 192 kbps, and the underlying algorithm was incorporated into the MPEG-4 Audio standard (ISO/IEC 14496-3) as one of its defined object types. Despite strong technical merits, VQF never achieved widespread adoption: encoding was slow compared to MP3, hardware player support was scarce, and the proprietary licensing discouraged third-party development. In 2009, the FFmpeg project reverse-engineered the TwinVQ decoder, bringing playback support to VLC and other open-source players. VQF stands as a notable case study in codec history — technically ambitious yet eclipsed by MP3's ecosystem momentum and the later rise of AAC.
Initial release: 1996
HTK is the native waveform container for the Hidden Markov Model Toolkit, a software suite developed at Cambridge University's Engineering Department for speech recognition research. First distributed in 1993, HTK rapidly became a reference platform in computational linguistics labs worldwide, and its file format followed suit. Each file stores a sequence of parameter vectors or raw samples prefixed by a 12-byte header specifying the number of frames, the frame period in 100 ns units, the byte count per frame, and a type code indicating the data kind — options range from waveform PCM to Mel-frequency cepstral coefficients and filter-bank energies. This versatility lets a single container carry both source audio and extracted features without changing parsers. The deliberately minimal header avoids alignment padding or optional chunks, making the format trivial to read from C, Python, or MATLAB with a few lines of binary I/O. Three advantages underpin HTK's lasting relevance: tight integration with the HTK training and recognition pipeline, deterministic byte layout that eliminates parser ambiguity, and widespread adoption in academic corpora.
Initial release: 1993

Frequently Asked Questions

What is HTK?

HTK is a specialized audio format — the Hidden Markov Model Toolkit research format.

Why convert VQF to HTK?

VQF is a dead format with no player support. Converting to HTK rescues your audio for specific applications that need this format.

What handles HTK?

Specialized tools, SoX, and targeted professional software support HTK audio processing and playback.

Is there quality loss?

VQF is lossy — the original quality loss is permanent. The HTK output preserves whatever quality the VQF file contained.

Is the conversion secure?

VQF uploads are deleted immediately after conversion. HTK results are removed from servers within 24 hours.