W64 to SNDR Converter

Turn your W64 recordings into SNDR format online

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Cloud-Based Engine

Conversion from W64 to SNDR happens entirely on our servers. Your device stays fast and free — no CPU load on your end.

Tunable Output

Fine-tune audio parameters like sample rate, channel layout, and encoding quality when converting W64 to SNDR.

Rapid Conversion

Our servers convert W64 to SNDR quickly, even for longer recordings. Download your result as soon as processing finishes.

How to convert W64 to SNDR

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

W64 (Wave64) is a 64-bit audio container originally designed by Sonic Foundry — creators of Sound Forge — and later maintained by Sony after acquiring Sonic Foundry's desktop software division in 2003. The format directly addresses the 4 GB file-size ceiling imposed by Microsoft's 32-bit RIFF/WAV specification, a limitation that becomes problematic during long recording sessions, multi-channel captures, or high-sample-rate productions. W64 achieves this by extending chunk identifiers and size fields to 64 bits, using GUIDs instead of four-character codes. This structural change permits files to reach sizes measured in exabytes, effectively removing any practical storage constraint. The format supports arbitrary sample rates, bit depths, and channel configurations, making it well suited for film scoring, live concert recording, and scientific data acquisition. Sound Forge, Audacity, and other professional digital audio workstations provide native W64 support for seamless import and export. For engineers and producers who routinely work with long-form, high-fidelity material, W64 offers the reliability and simplicity of WAV without the frustrating size restriction.
Developer: Sonic Foundry
Initial release: 2001
SNDR is the audio file format produced by Sounder, an early MS-DOS sound recording and playback utility from the early 1990s. Before Windows brought multimedia to the mainstream, Sounder was among a handful of DOS programs that let PC users capture and play audio through rudimentary hardware — often the PC speaker itself or early 8-bit sound cards. The format stores 8-bit unsigned PCM samples without any file header, relying on application defaults to determine playback parameters. Sample rates were typically low (4000 to 11025 Hz), reflecting hardware limits and storage costs when a 20 MB hard drive was considered generous. One practical advantage was absolute minimalism — with zero overhead bytes, every bit of the file was audio data, which mattered when storage was measured in kilobytes. The format could be piped directly to sound hardware without parsing, making real-time playback feasible on slow processors. Despite its simplicity, SNDR holds a place in computing history as one of the formats that brought digital audio to ordinary PCs. Files from this era occasionally surface in retrocomputing archives. SoX and ffmpeg can interpret SNDR files given the correct parameters, enabling preservation of early digital audio recordings.
Developer: Sounder (MS-DOS)
Initial release: 1991

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert W64 to SNDR?

W64 was built for professional post-production needs. Converting to SNDR makes your audio portable and easy to share.

What programs can open SNDR?

You can play SNDR using SoX, Audacity, command-line audio tools. It works out of the box on most systems with standard audio software.

How is audio fidelity handled during conversion?

The converter preserves maximum fidelity. If SNDR is lossless, no data is discarded. Lossy codecs apply minimal perceptible compression.

Does the converter support batch W64 conversion?

Absolutely. You can upload a batch of W64 files and convert them all to SNDR together, saving significant time on large collections.

Are my W64 uploads kept private?

Yes. Uploaded W64 files are deleted right after conversion, and the SNDR output is removed from our servers within 24 hours automatically.