Audio Format Conversion: Avoiding Quality Loss and Common Pitfalls
Converting between audio formats seems straightforward but introduces quality loss if done incorrectly. Understanding transcoding chains, generational loss, and format capabilities prevents common conversion mistakes.
Key Takeaways
- Converting MP3 to AAC (or any lossy-to-lossy conversion) applies a second round of psychoacoustic compression to already-compressed audio.
- When changing sample rate (e.g., 48 kHz studio → 44.1 kHz CD), use a high-quality sample rate converter (SRC).
- Reducing bit depth (24-bit → 16-bit) requires dithering — adding a tiny amount of shaped noise that masks the quantization distortion from truncating sample values.
- When converting formats, metadata (title, artist, album, artwork) may not transfer automatically.
- When converting a large library, process a small test batch first (10 files).
Калькулятор BPM
The Cardinal Rule: Never Transcode Lossy to Lossy
Converting MP3 to AAC (or any lossy-to-lossy conversion) applies a second round of psychoacoustic compression to already-compressed audio. Each generation degrades quality further. The artifacts from the first compression are treated as audio data by the second encoder, producing compounding distortion. Always convert from a lossless source.
Conversion Matrix
| From → To | Quality Impact | Recommended? |
|---|---|---|
| WAV → FLAC | None (lossless) | Yes |
| FLAC → WAV | None (lossless) | Yes |
| WAV → MP3/AAC | One-time lossy | Yes (final delivery) |
| FLAC → MP3/AAC | One-time lossy | Yes (final delivery) |
| MP3 → AAC | Double lossy | No — use lossless source |
| AAC → MP3 | Double lossy | No — use lossless source |
| MP3 → FLAC | Wastes space, no quality gain | No |
| MP3 → WAV | Wastes space, no quality gain | Only for editing |
Sample Rate Conversion
When changing sample rate (e.g., 48 kHz studio → 44.1 kHz CD), use a high-quality sample rate converter (SRC). Poor-quality SRC introduces aliasing artifacts — subtle metallic distortion. Most professional audio editors use high-quality SRC by default.
Bit Depth Conversion
Reducing bit depth (24-bit → 16-bit) requires dithering — adding a tiny amount of shaped noise that masks the quantization distortion from truncating sample values. Without dithering, quiet passages develop a harsh, granular quality.
Metadata Preservation
When converting formats, metadata (title, artist, album, artwork) may not transfer automatically. ID3 tags (MP3), Vorbis comments (FLAC/OGG), and MP4 atoms (AAC/M4A) use different metadata containers. Verify that tags survive the conversion and re-apply manually if needed.
Batch Conversion Tips
When converting a large library, process a small test batch first (10 files). Spot-check the output by listening to 30 seconds from the beginning, middle, and end of each file. Verify file sizes are reasonable — abnormally small files may indicate encoding errors.