AVC Hd Video to TTA conversion is the process of transforming an MTS file (AVC/H.264 high-definition video typically produced by AVCHD camcorders) into a TTA file, where the audio track is encoded in the True Audio (TTA) lossless audio format or the video container is repackaged to include TTA audio. This conversion extracts or transcodes the audio stream into TTA while preserving as much of the original audio fidelity as possible and optionally remuxes video data into a compatible container for playback or archival.
Related guides
Practical guides to help you choose formats, preserve quality, and avoid common conversion problems.
MOV files from iPhone, Mac, and editing apps often need conversion before they are easy to share, upload, or play on Windows. This guide explains MOV vs MP4, when you can remux without quality loss, when to re-encode, and the best MP4 settings for web, email, YouTube, Windows, audio, subtitles, HDR, file size, and batch conversion.
Read guide →Turning an MP4 into a GIF is simple, but making one that looks sharp, loads quickly, and works well on social platforms takes a few smart choices. This guide explains why GIFs get large, how frame rate, dimensions, duration, color palettes, and dithering affect quality, and when MP4, WebP, or animated PNG may be the better format.
Read guide →Compare the three most popular video container formats — MP4, MKV, and WebM — across codec support, device compatibility, file size, streaming performance, and editing workflows. Learn which format fits your specific use case and how to convert between them.
Read guide →Drag your .MTS file from your computer or use the browse function.
Confirm .tta as the selected destination format.
Click "Convert" and download your converted .TTA file once ready.
The MTS file format typically uses the video/mp2t MIME type and contains H.264 or AVC video codecs combined with AC-3 or PCM audio. TTA files use the audio/x-tta MIME type and provide lossless audio compression ideal for audiophiles and archival purposes. MTS is common in HD camcorder recordings, while TTA is favored for high-fidelity audio playback.
The TTA (.TTA) format is commonly used for video. Understanding its characteristics can be helpful when converting to or from other formats like AVC Hd Video.
While specific technical details aren't available here, TTA files generally serve the purpose of storing video effectively within their domain.
Easily convert your AVC Hd Video (.MTS) files to the high-quality TTA format using our online MTS to TTA converter. Designed for simplicity and speed, our tool helps you transform your videos without the need for complex software downloads.
AVC Hd Video (MTS) is a widely used video format that combines high-definition video with audio, ideal for camcorder recordings. In contrast, TTA is a lossless audio codec focused on preserving audio quality without compression loss. While MTS handles both video and audio streams, TTA is specialized for pure audio use cases.
Keep source MTS files under 1GB when converting multiple files at once to avoid memory and upload limits; single-file optimal sizes are 100–500MB for quick uploads.
Preserve quality by selecting lossless TTA output and matching the original sample rate and bit depth instead of resampling; avoid transcoding video unless necessary.
For batch conversions, queue files in small groups (5–10) or use a desktop tool with command-line support to prevent timeouts and speed up processing.
Be aware that TTA is an audio-only lossless codec; converting an MTS that contains only compressed audio (e.g., AC-3) will require audio decoding and re-encoding to TTA, which changes container structure but preserves audio quality.
This converter made it so simple to extract high-quality audio from my MTS videos.
Emma R.
Photographer
The TTA format preserves my sound perfectly after conversion.
Jason M.
Music Producer
Fast and reliable conversion from MTS to TTA without any software hassle.
Lily K.
Videographer
Start your free MTS to TTA conversion now.
Drag your file here to to upload.
Up to 250MB
Some players and devices don’t support TTA natively—consider remuxing into MKV with a TTA track or also exporting a widely supported format (FLAC) for playback compatibility.