WVE to CVU Converter

Transform Psion WVE audio into unsigned CVSD

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PDA Audio Rescued

Extract audio from legacy Psion WVE files and convert to CVU — make vintage PDA recordings accessible in a supported format.

No PsiWin Needed

Convert WVE files without PsiWin or SoX. The entire process runs in your web browser on any operating system.

Secure Processing

Uploaded WVE files are deleted immediately after conversion. Output files are purged from our servers within 24 hours.

How to convert WVE 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

WVE is the audio format native to the Psion Series 3 family of personal digital assistants, released by British company Psion PLC beginning in September 1991. These clamshell PDAs included a built-in voice recorder, and all dictation functionality relied on WVE files to store captured sound. Each file begins with the ASCII signature "ALawSoundFile**" followed by a minimal header, then raw A-law encoded audio sampled at 8 kHz — a rate inherited from digital telephony standards. At 8000 bytes per second, a one-minute recording occupies just 480 KB, which was essential given that Psion devices stored data on SRAM cards typically ranging from 128 KB to 2 MB. The A-law encoding provides reasonable speech clarity within these tight storage constraints, prioritizing intelligibility over high-fidelity reproduction. WVE files can be converted to WAV or other modern formats using SoX, Awave Studio, or specialized Psion file utilities. While the format is firmly a product of early-1990s handheld computing, it holds historical significance as one of the first audio recording formats designed for pocket-sized consumer devices. Collectors and researchers studying mobile computing history occasionally encounter WVE files when recovering data from legacy SRAM media.
Developer: Psion PLC
Initial release: 1991
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

Why convert WVE to CVU?

CVU is the unsigned CVSD variant for specific hardware that expects unsigned delta samples.

What can open CVU files?

SoX processes CVU for telephony and DSP workflows.

What is the WVE format?

WVE is the native audio format of Psion PDA devices (Series 3, 5, Revo). It stores 8-bit A-law encoded audio — a legacy from the EPOC operating system.

Can modern systems play WVE?

SoX and PsiWin on Windows can process WVE files. Standard media players do not support it — conversion is the easiest path to playback.

Can I convert multiple WVE files?

Yes. Upload several Psion recordings and batch-convert them all at once — efficient for archiving an entire PDA audio library.