AAF to W64 Converter

Pull the soundtrack from AAF videos into W64 format

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Settings

The codec to encode the audio track. Codec "Without reencoding" copies the audio stream from the input file into output without re-encoding if possible.
Set the number of audio channels. This setting is most useful when downmixing channels (e.g., from 5.1 to stereo).
Set the sample rate of the audio. Music with a full spectrum (20 Hz — 20 kHz) requires values not lower than 44.1 kHz to achieve transparency. More info can be found on the wiki.

aaf

AAF (Advanced Authoring Format) is a professional multimedia interchange format designed to facilitate the exchange of production data between content creation tools. Originally developed by a consortium including Microsoft, Avid Technology, and Adobe Systems, the format is now maintained by the Advanced Media Workflow Association (AMWA). First released in 1998, AAF provides a rich metadata framework that preserves not just audio and video essence data but also editorial decisions, effects parameters, transitions, and timeline structures. This makes it particularly valuable in post-production workflows where projects move between different editing systems and need to retain complex composition information that simpler formats would discard. AAF supports both embedded and referenced media, giving editors the flexibility to bundle everything into a single file or keep media external with linked references. The format handles multiple video and audio tracks with full timecode support, making it a reliable vehicle for broadcast and film projects. A structured approach to metadata preservation means that transitions, keyframes, and clip relationships survive the round-trip between applications, reducing rework and manual reconstruction when collaborating across different production platforms.
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w64

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.
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Fast Audio Ripping

Extracting W64 from AAF is faster than full video conversion — our servers focus on the audio stream and skip video processing.

Adjustable Settings

Fine-tune audio parameters — codec, bitrate, and quality — before converting to tailor the output precisely.

Cloud Conversion

Processing runs entirely in the cloud, so your computer or phone does none of the heavy lifting. Just upload and download.

How to convert AAF to W64

1

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

2

Choose w64 or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your w64 file right afterwards

About formats

AAF (Advanced Authoring Format) is a professional multimedia interchange format designed to facilitate the exchange of production data between content creation tools. Originally developed by a consortium including Microsoft, Avid Technology, and Adobe Systems, the format is now maintained by the Advanced Media Workflow Association (AMWA). First released in 1998, AAF provides a rich metadata framework that preserves not just audio and video essence data but also editorial decisions, effects parameters, transitions, and timeline structures. This makes it particularly valuable in post-production workflows where projects move between different editing systems and need to retain complex composition information that simpler formats would discard. AAF supports both embedded and referenced media, giving editors the flexibility to bundle everything into a single file or keep media external with linked references. The format handles multiple video and audio tracks with full timecode support, making it a reliable vehicle for broadcast and film projects. A structured approach to metadata preservation means that transitions, keyframes, and clip relationships survive the round-trip between applications, reducing rework and manual reconstruction when collaborating across different production platforms.
Initial release: April 3, 1998
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

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the benefit of converting AAF to W64?

Pulling W64 audio from an AAF project gives you a standalone sound file without the complexity of professional editing containers.

What program opens W64 files?

Sound Forge, Audacity, and professional audio editors can open Wave64 files exceeding 4 GB.

Is registration necessary?

No. Basic conversions work without an account. Signing up is optional and provides access to extended features and larger uploads.

Will the audio quality match the original?

You can set the output bitrate to match or exceed the original audio quality. Higher settings preserve more detail from the AAF source.

How fast is the audio extraction?

Audio extraction is quicker than full video conversion since only the sound track is processed. Most files are done within seconds.

Can I choose the audio bitrate?

Yes. Adjust the bitrate, sample rate, and channel count before converting to get the W64 quality that suits your listening needs.