ImTOO Video to Audio Converter: Best Settings for Lossless Audio Output
Extracting lossless audio from video ensures you preserve the original sound quality for editing, archiving, or listening. Below are step-by-step instructions and recommended settings in ImTOO Video to Audio Converter to get truly lossless results (or the highest-quality extraction possible when true lossless isn’t available).
1. Choose the right output format
- Preferred (lossless): FLAC — compressed lossless, preserves original audio perfectly and is widely supported.
- Alternative (lossless for PCM streams): WAV — uncompressed PCM, exact copy of source audio when the source is PCM. Larger file sizes.
- Avoid: MP3, AAC, WMA — these are lossy and will degrade quality.
2. Detect source audio codec and sample parameters
- Load your video into ImTOO.
- Check the source audio codec, sample rate, bit depth, and channels (often shown in the file info).
- Match these parameters in the output to avoid resampling or unnecessary re-encoding.
3. Output profile settings — recommended values
Use a custom profile and set these options:
- Format: FLAC (or WAV if you need raw PCM)
- Audio codec: FLAC encoder (or PCM for WAV)
- Bit depth: Match source (commonly 16-bit or 24-bit). If unknown, choose 24-bit for better headroom.
- Sample rate: Match source (44.1 kHz for CD audio, 48 kHz for most video). If forced to choose, select the source rate to avoid resampling.
- Channels: Match source (stereo, 5.1, etc.)
- Bitrate: For FLAC this is not the same as lossy bitrate; set to “maximum” or use default lossless setting. For WAV, bitrate is determined by sample rate × bit depth × channels.
- Normalization: Off — normalization alters dynamic range; skip it for a lossless copy.
- Volume adjustment: 0 dB (no change).
- Sample format: If available, choose “original” or highest precision (e.g., 24-bit PCM).
4. Advanced options to preserve integrity
- Disable filters/effects: Turn off fade, echo, EQ, or any processing.
- Use direct audio stream copy (if available): If the source audio is already in a lossless or PCM format that matches your desired output container (e.g., source is PCM and you choose WAV), select “Direct Stream Copy” or “Copy audio” to avoid re-encoding entirely.
- Keep metadata: Enable copying tags if you want to preserve track info; this does not affect audio quality.
5. Batch conversion tips
- Create one optimized profile for all files with identical source parameters.
- For mixed sources, group files by matching sample rate/bit depth to avoid resampling.
6. Verify output quality
- Compare the waveform or spectrogram in an audio editor (e.g., Audacity) to ensure no clipping or unexpected changes.
- Listen to critical passages on good headphones or monitors. Lossless output should match the original audio exactly.
7. Storage and workflow considerations
- File size: WAV files are large (approx. 10 MB/min for 16-bit/44.1 kHz stereo). FLAC reduces size while staying lossless.
- Archiving: Use FLAC for storage; convert to WAV only when required by a specific tool or workflow.
- Backup: Keep originals until you confirm converted files are intact.
Quick checklist (summary)
- Format: FLAC (preferred) or WAV
- Match sample rate, bit depth, and channels to source
- Disable normalization and effects
- Use direct stream copy when possible
- Verify with waveform/spectrogram and critical listening
Following these settings in ImTOO Video to Audio Converter will give you the best chance of preserving original audio fidelity during extraction.
Leave a Reply