OPUS to CVSD Converter

Produce filtered CVSD delta modulation from OPUS

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Military Voice Codec

CVSD is standard in military and telephony voice systems — produce encoded audio from OPUS recordings.

Secure Handling

OPUS uploads are deleted after processing and CVSD results purged within 24 hours — voice data stays private.

Online Encoding

No specialized codec hardware needed — convert OPUS to CVSD directly in your browser.

How to convert OPUS to CVSD

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

Opus is a versatile, open audio codec standardized by the IETF as RFC 6716 in 2012. It fuses two coding approaches — SILK for speech and CELT for music — into one algorithm that blends between them based on content type and bitrate. This hybrid design lets Opus outperform virtually every other codec across a wide range of uses: low-latency voice at 6 kbps, high-fidelity music at 128 kbps, and everything in between. It supports bitrates from 6 to 510 kbps, sample rates up to 48 kHz, and frame sizes as small as 2.5 ms, giving it the lowest algorithmic latency of any mainstream audio codec. Three advantages make Opus especially compelling. It is completely royalty-free and open-source, removing licensing barriers that hold back proprietary codecs. It achieves transparent quality at roughly half the bitrate of MP3 and beats AAC at equivalent rates. And its low latency makes it the mandatory codec for WebRTC, so every modern browser ships with an Opus decoder. WhatsApp, Discord, Zoom, and YouTube all rely on Opus for real-time audio.
Initial release: September 11, 2012
CVSD (Continuously Variable Slope Delta modulation) is a voice digitization method standardized for military and telephony use by NATO and the CCITT during the 1970s. It encodes differences between consecutive samples as a single bit — 1 if the current sample exceeds the prediction, 0 otherwise — while a syllabic companding filter adjusts step size by monitoring runs of identical bits. Operating at 16 to 64 kbps, CVSD balances voice intelligibility against bandwidth, making it the encoding of choice for secure military links and tactical radio systems. The bitstream can be decoded with straightforward hardware, originally built into dedicated integrated circuits. One advantage is implementation simplicity — encoders and decoders need minimal resources, enabling real-time processing on low-power embedded hardware. Robustness under noisy conditions is another strength, as single-bit errors affect only local samples rather than corrupting entire frames. SoX provides software encoding and decoding support, letting modern systems work with legacy CVSD recordings from military archives and vintage telecommunications infrastructure.
Developer: CCITT / NATO
Initial release: 1970

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert OPUS to CVSD?

CVSD is used in military radio, telephony hardware, and specialized voice transmission systems that require delta modulation encoding.

What uses CVSD?

Military radios, telephony equipment, SoX, and voice codec testing tools consume CVSD-formatted audio data.

How does CVSD differ from CVS?

CVSD is the filtered variant — it applies output smoothing that improves speech intelligibility over raw CVS.

Is CVSD for voice only?

Yes — CVSD is optimized for speech at low bandwidth. Music and complex audio are not suitable for this codec.

Can I batch convert?

Upload multiple OPUS voice recordings and encode them all to CVSD at once.