MAUD to FSSD Converter

Transform Amiga MAUD recordings to FSSD online

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MAUD to FSSD

Transform vintage Amiga MAUD recordings into FSSD — bridging retro computing audio with legacy digital audio processing tasks.

No Amiga Required

Convert MAUD to FSSD without booting an Amiga emulator or installing vintage software. Works from any modern platform.

Quick Results

MAUD files are typically compact. Conversion to FSSD completes rapidly on our cloud servers with minimal wait.

How to convert MAUD to FSSD

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

MAUD is an audio file format developed by MacroSystem for the Commodore Amiga platform, introduced in the early 1990s as part of their digital video and audio production tools. Built on the Amiga IFF (Interchange File Format) chunk architecture, MAUD files organize data into clearly delineated chunks — MHDR for the header, MDAT for sample data, and optional annotation chunks for metadata. The format supports mono and stereo layouts with bit depths of 8 or 16 bits and sample rates up to 48 kHz, which represented professional-grade specifications on Amiga hardware. Both signed linear PCM and A-law/mu-law encodings are available, offering a choice between fidelity and file size. MAUD saw primary use in the Amiga video production community, where MacroSystem Retina and VLab Motion boards demanded synchronized audio that the standard 8SVX format could not deliver. Conversion support exists today through SoX and libsndfile, ensuring vintage Amiga productions remain recoverable. Three distinct advantages stand out: clean IFF-based structure that any chunk-aware parser can navigate, 16-bit stereo capability ahead of typical Amiga audio, and lightweight overhead that left maximum CPU headroom for video rendering.
Initial release: 1992
FSSD is a raw audio format that originated in the classic Macintosh ecosystem, where Farallon Computing's MacRecorder hardware (1988) stored digitized sound as unsigned 8-bit PCM in resource fork entries tagged with the 'FSSD' type code. In modern audio processing tools such as SoX, FSSD is treated as an alias for the u8 (unsigned 8-bit) raw format — headerless files containing a flat stream of single-byte amplitude samples, where each value from 0 to 255 represents an audio level with 128 as the center point. Because there is no header, playback parameters like sample rate and channel count must be provided externally. The original MacRecorder typically captured at rates up to 22 kHz in mono, though any sample rate is valid when interpreting the raw data. FSSD and its compressed companion format HCOM (which adds Huffman compression to the same underlying data) were the standard audio formats for early Mac multimedia: HyperCard stacks, educational CD-ROMs, and system alert sounds of the late 1980s and early 1990s relied heavily on this encoding. One advantage of the raw FSSD format is trivial parseability — with no container overhead, the audio data begins at byte zero and can be read by any tool capable of processing unsigned 8-bit PCM. The format's historical significance also makes it practically relevant for digital archivists: converting FSSD recordings to modern containers like WAV preserves the original audio content losslessly, since the raw samples only need a header prepended, not any form of transcoding.
Developer: Farallon Computing
Initial release: 1988

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert MAUD to FSSD?

FSSD provides raw sound data format. Converting from MAUD brings vintage Amiga audio into this format for legacy digital audio processing tasks.

What opens FSSD files?

SoX and legacy audio tools can handle FSSD format files for playback and editing.

Is quality preserved?

Quality depends on the FSSD encoding. The conversion faithfully represents whatever audio content the MAUD source contains.

What is MAUD?

MAUD is a Commodore Amiga audio format from 1985, used by Amiga audio software for samples and recordings. It requires conversion for modern use.

Can I batch convert?

Upload multiple MAUD files and convert them all to FSSD at once — process your entire Amiga audio collection in one session.