FTS to SNB conversion is the process of transforming image files from the FTS (a flexible tiled image format often used for forensic, mapping, or large-resolution imagery) into SNB (an optimized image bundle format designed for fast rendering and compact storage). This conversion repackages image data, adjusts tiling/compression, and optionally changes quality settings so the resulting SNB files are efficient for viewing, transferring, or integration with applications that expect the SNB bundle structure.
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Read guide →Drag your .FTS file from your computer or use the browse function.
Confirm .snb as the selected destination format.
Click "Convert" and download your converted .SNB file once ready.
FTS files usually have the MIME type application/x-fts and are used for specific data encoding or proprietary storage, often requiring specialized codecs to decode. SNB files typically use the MIME type application/x-snb and are designed for more universal access and compatibility, supporting common codecs and playback tools.
The SNB (.SNB) format is commonly used for image. Understanding its characteristics can be helpful when converting to or from other formats like FTS.
While specific technical details aren't available here, SNB files generally serve the purpose of storing image effectively within their domain.
Our Online FTS to SNB Converter allows you to quickly and reliably convert your FTS files into SNB format without any software installation. Designed for users who need seamless conversion for better compatibility, this tool supports all major browsers and ensures high-quality output every time.
FTS files are typically used for specialized data storage and may not be widely supported by standard applications. SNB files offer greater compatibility and flexibility, making them preferable for general use and sharing. Converting FTS to SNB ensures broader accessibility and ease of use.
Keep individual FTS source tiles under 10–20 MB to ensure smooth conversion and avoid memory spikes during processing.
To preserve detail, choose the SNB high-quality or lossless output; avoid aggressive downscaling or the "fast" compression preset when detail matters.
For large archives, use batch conversion with queuing and incremental commits; convert smaller groups (50–200 files) to reduce failure recovery time.
Note format-specific limitations: some FTS metadata (custom tags or proprietary extensions) may not map directly to SNB sidecars and may require manual export/import.
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Up to 250MB
If you rely on exact pixel-to-pixel fidelity (forensics or scientific imagery), validate a sample conversion first and keep original FTS files archived.