VOB to AIFF Converter

Extract uncompressed AIFF audio from DVD video files

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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.

vob

VOB (Video Object) is the primary container format used on DVD-Video discs, defined as part of the DVD specification developed by the DVD Forum. The format first appeared with the DVD standard finalized in September 1996 and has since been used on billions of DVD discs produced worldwide. VOB files are based on the MPEG-2 program stream format, containing multiplexed MPEG-2 video alongside audio in AC-3 (Dolby Digital), DTS, MPEG-1 Layer II, or LPCM formats. Beyond audio and video, VOB files also carry DVD subtitle streams as bitmap overlays, navigation data for menu interaction, and chapter point information. The files reside in the VIDEO_TS directory on a DVD disc, with naming conventions (VTS_01_1.VOB, etc.) reflecting the title and part structure of the content. Individual VOB files are limited to approximately 1 GB to accommodate the UDF file system requirements, with longer content spanning multiple files seamlessly. The format supports both NTSC (720x480) and PAL (720x576) video resolutions at bit rates up to 9.8 Mbps for combined audio and video. Integration of video, multi-track audio, subtitles, and navigation into a single program stream made VOB a complete solution for consumer movie delivery. While streaming and newer disc formats have supplanted DVD for new content, VOB remains hugely relevant for accessing the vast library of existing DVD content.
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aiff

AIFF (Audio Interchange File Format) was developed by Apple in 1988, drawing its structural design from Electronic Arts' IFF standard. As an uncompressed audio container, AIFF stores linear PCM data at full CD quality — typically 16-bit at 44.1 kHz — preserving every detail of the original recording without lossy encoding. The format organizes content into chunks that can also carry metadata such as markers, instrument definitions, and comments. Professional audio engineers on macOS frequently rely on AIFF because it guarantees bit-perfect fidelity through every stage of editing and mastering. One significant advantage is zero generational loss: unlike MP3 or AAC, repeated saves never degrade the signal. Another strength is seamless integration with Apple's professional tools, including Logic Pro and GarageBand, where AIFF serves as a native working format. The container supports multiple sample rates and bit depths up to 32-bit, accommodating high-resolution workflows that exceed CD-quality specifications. For anyone prioritizing lossless integrity over storage efficiency, AIFF remains a dependable choice across the recording industry.
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Lossless Mac Audio

AIFF preserves full DVD audio quality without compression — the native choice for professional audio on Apple systems.

DVD to Production

Extracting VOB audio as AIFF drops it straight into macOS production tools like Logic Pro and GarageBand.

Cloud Extraction

Audio extraction runs on our servers, so pulling AIFF from large VOB files never taxes your local hardware.

How to convert VOB to AIFF

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

VOB (Video Object) is the primary container format used on DVD-Video discs, defined as part of the DVD specification developed by the DVD Forum. The format first appeared with the DVD standard finalized in September 1996 and has since been used on billions of DVD discs produced worldwide. VOB files are based on the MPEG-2 program stream format, containing multiplexed MPEG-2 video alongside audio in AC-3 (Dolby Digital), DTS, MPEG-1 Layer II, or LPCM formats. Beyond audio and video, VOB files also carry DVD subtitle streams as bitmap overlays, navigation data for menu interaction, and chapter point information. The files reside in the VIDEO_TS directory on a DVD disc, with naming conventions (VTS_01_1.VOB, etc.) reflecting the title and part structure of the content. Individual VOB files are limited to approximately 1 GB to accommodate the UDF file system requirements, with longer content spanning multiple files seamlessly. The format supports both NTSC (720x480) and PAL (720x576) video resolutions at bit rates up to 9.8 Mbps for combined audio and video. Integration of video, multi-track audio, subtitles, and navigation into a single program stream made VOB a complete solution for consumer movie delivery. While streaming and newer disc formats have supplanted DVD for new content, VOB remains hugely relevant for accessing the vast library of existing DVD content.
Developer: DVD Forum
Initial release: September 1996
AIFF (Audio Interchange File Format) was developed by Apple in 1988, drawing its structural design from Electronic Arts' IFF standard. As an uncompressed audio container, AIFF stores linear PCM data at full CD quality — typically 16-bit at 44.1 kHz — preserving every detail of the original recording without lossy encoding. The format organizes content into chunks that can also carry metadata such as markers, instrument definitions, and comments. Professional audio engineers on macOS frequently rely on AIFF because it guarantees bit-perfect fidelity through every stage of editing and mastering. One significant advantage is zero generational loss: unlike MP3 or AAC, repeated saves never degrade the signal. Another strength is seamless integration with Apple's professional tools, including Logic Pro and GarageBand, where AIFF serves as a native working format. The container supports multiple sample rates and bit depths up to 32-bit, accommodating high-resolution workflows that exceed CD-quality specifications. For anyone prioritizing lossless integrity over storage efficiency, AIFF remains a dependable choice across the recording industry.
Developer: Apple Inc.
Initial release: 1988

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert VOB to AIFF?

AIFF is the standard uncompressed audio format on macOS — ideal for importing DVD soundtracks into GarageBand, Logic Pro, or Final Cut.

What software opens AIFF?

QuickTime, iTunes, Logic Pro, GarageBand, Audacity, and VLC all handle AIFF natively on macOS and Windows.

Is AIFF the same as WAV?

Both are uncompressed PCM audio — AIFF is Apple-native while WAV is Microsoft-native. Quality is identical; compatibility differs slightly.

Are AIFF files large?

Yes — uncompressed audio means larger files. The benefit is zero quality loss, making AIFF ideal for editing and mastering.

Can I convert multiple VOBs?

Upload several files at once and extract each audio track to AIFF in parallel — download individually when ready.

VOB to AIFF Quality Rating

4.2 (5 votes)
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