SD2 to FSSD Converter

Turn your SD2 recordings into FSSD format online

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Multi-File Support

Queue several SD2 files and convert them to FSSD in a single session. Batch processing saves time on large collections.

Tunable Output

Fine-tune audio parameters like sample rate, channel layout, and encoding quality when converting SD2 to FSSD.

Accurate Output

Expect reliable, high-fidelity results converting SD2 to FSSD. The engine respects your original audio quality throughout.

How to convert SD2 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

Sound Designer II (SD2) is a professional audio format created by Digidesign around 1988 as the successor to the original Sound Designer format. For over a decade, SD2 was the standard interchange format in professional recording studios, especially those on Macintosh systems. It stores uncompressed linear PCM audio at up to 24-bit resolution with sample rates used in professional production (44.1, 48, 88.2, and 96 kHz). A distinctive technical trait is its reliance on the classic Mac OS resource fork for critical metadata — sample rate, bit depth, and channel configuration — while audio data resides in the data fork. This design worked elegantly within the Mac ecosystem but created portability challenges when files moved to Windows or Unix. A key advantage was SD2's support for multiple channels in a single file and tight integration with the Pro Tools editing environment, enabling non-destructive region-based editing. The format also carried loop points and markers, making it valuable for sample libraries. As Avid Technology shifted Pro Tools toward WAV and AIFF, SD2 usage declined, but millions of legacy session archives still contain SD2 files needing occasional conversion.
Initial release: 1988
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 SD2 to FSSD?

Sound Designer II is locked into the Pro Tools and Mac ecosystem. FSSD broadens compatibility across platforms and software.

How do I open a FSSD recording?

You can play FSSD using SoX, Audacity, classic Mac audio tools. It works out of the box on most systems with standard audio software.

How is audio fidelity handled during conversion?

The converter preserves maximum fidelity. If FSSD is lossless, no data is discarded. Lossy codecs apply minimal perceptible compression.

Can I convert several SD2 recordings at once?

Yes — upload multiple SD2 files simultaneously and convert them all to FSSD in a single batch. No need to process one at a time.

Are my SD2 uploads kept private?

Yes. Uploaded SD2 files are deleted right after conversion, and the FSSD output is removed from our servers within 24 hours automatically.

Do I need to install anything?

No installation needed. The SD2 to FSSD converter is fully browser-based — open the page, upload your audio, and download the result.