VOX to IRCAM conversion is the process of converting audio files in the Dialogic VOX format — a low-bitrate ADPCM format commonly used for telephony and legacy voice recordings — into the IRCAM format, which is used by IRCAM (Institut de Recherche et Coordination Acoustique/Musique) tools and often involves high-precision, research-friendly audio containers. This conversion extracts and re-encodes the VOX audio data into an IRCAM-compatible file while preserving as much spectral detail and timing as possible for analysis or processing in IRCAM software.
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Read guide →Drag your .VOX file from your computer or use the browse function.
Confirm .ircam as the selected destination format.
Click "Convert" and download your converted .IRCAM file once ready.
VOX files use the Dialogic ADPCM codec with MIME type audio/vox, mainly utilized for telephony and voice recordings. IRCAM files correspond to the audio/ircam MIME type and support complex sound synthesis and high-resolution audio data, often used in music technology research. Conversion ensures proper codec decoding and encoding to maintain audio clarity and compatibility.
The IRCAM (.IRCAM) format is commonly used for audio. Understanding its characteristics can be helpful when converting to or from other formats like VOX.
While specific technical details aren't available here, IRCAM files generally serve the purpose of storing audio effectively within their domain.
Easily convert your VOX audio files to the IRCAM format with our fast and reliable online converter. Designed for audio professionals and enthusiasts, our tool simplifies the process while maintaining high-quality results.
VOX files are typically compressed audio recordings commonly used in telephony, while IRCAM files are designed for high-fidelity, multi-channel sound processing in research and professional audio applications. IRCAM offers more advanced encoding options and greater flexibility compared to the simpler VOX format.
Keep VOX inputs small and segmented: VOX is often low-bitrate; split long recordings into files under 50–200 MB for faster, more reliable conversion and editing.
Preserve quality by upsampling carefully: convert native VOX sample rate (often 8000 Hz) to a higher IRCAM rate only when needed for analysis, and use 24-bit or 32-bit float output to avoid introducing quantization noise.
Use batch conversion for many files: process multiple VOX files in a queue to maintain consistent settings (sample rate, bit depth, normalization) and save time.
Be aware of format limitations: VOX uses ADPCM and may lack metadata and high-frequency content; converting cannot restore lost fidelity or bandwidth beyond the original recording.
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Sound Engineer
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Music Producer
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Audio Technician
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Check compatibility with target tools: IRCAM toolchains may expect specific wrappers or metadata—confirm whether your target IRCAM application requires a particular IRCAM container or sample format.