Convert MP2 to SPX
Max file size 100mb.
MP2 vs SPX Format Comparison
| Aspect | MP2 (Source Format) | SPX (Target Format) |
|---|---|---|
| Format Overview |
MP2
MPEG-1 Audio Layer II
MPEG-1 Audio Layer II (MP2) is a lossy codec standardized in 1993. MP2 offers more robust error resilience and lower encoding latency than MP3, making it the preferred format for broadcasting. It remains the standard for DAB radio and DVB television. Lossy Legacy |
SPX
Speex Speech Codec
Speex is a free, open-source audio codec specifically designed for speech compression. Developed by Jean-Marc Valin under the Xiph.Org Foundation, Speex supports narrowband (8 kHz), wideband (16 kHz), and ultra-wideband (32 kHz) encoding at bitrates from 2 to 44 kbps. It was widely used in VoIP applications before being succeeded by the Opus codec. Lossy Legacy |
| Technical Specifications |
Sample Rates: 16 kHz – 48 kHz
Bit Rates: 32–384 kbps Channels: Mono, Stereo, Joint Stereo Codec: MPEG-1/2 Layer II Container: Raw MP2 frames (.mp2) |
Sample Rates: 8 kHz, 16 kHz, 32 kHz
Bit Rates: 2–44 kbps (VBR/CBR/ABR) Channels: Mono, Stereo Codec: Speex (CELP-based) Container: Ogg (.spx) |
| Audio Encoding |
MP2 uses subband coding with psychoacoustic masking, optimized for broadcast: # Encode to MP2 at 256 kbps ffmpeg -i input.wav -codec:a mp2 \ -b:a 256k output.mp2 # Broadcast MP2 (48 kHz, 384 kbps) ffmpeg -i input.wav -codec:a mp2 \ -ar 48000 -b:a 384k output.mp2 |
Speex uses Code-Excited Linear Prediction (CELP) optimized for human speech, with built-in voice activity detection and comfort noise generation: # Encode to Speex wideband ffmpeg -i input.wav -codec:a libspeex \ -ar 16000 output.spx # Speex with quality setting (0-10) ffmpeg -i input.wav -codec:a libspeex \ -compression_level 8 output.spx |
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| Version History |
Introduced: 1993 (ISO/IEC 11172-3)
Current Version: MPEG-1/2 Layer II Status: Mature, active in broadcasting Evolution: Musicam (1989) → MPEG-1 L2 (1993) → MPEG-2 L2 (1995) |
Introduced: 2002 (Xiph.Org Foundation)
Final Version: Speex 1.2 (2008) Status: Obsoleted by Opus (2012), still functional Evolution: Speex (2002) → Opus (2012, successor) |
| Software Support |
Media Players: VLC, WMP, foobar2000
Broadcast: DAB encoders, DVB multiplexers Mobile: Android via VLC Web Browsers: Chrome, Firefox (limited) Tools: FFmpeg, TwoLAME |
Media Players: VLC, foobar2000, MPlayer
VoIP: Asterisk, FreeSWITCH, Oribter (legacy) Mobile: Limited — requires third-party apps Web Browsers: Not natively supported Libraries: libspeex, FFmpeg, GStreamer |
Why Convert MP2 to SPX?
Converting MP2 to SPX transforms your audio into the Speex speech codec format, which is specifically optimized for encoding human voice at extremely low bitrates (2-44 kbps). While Speex has been officially obsoleted by Opus, it remains useful in legacy VoIP systems, embedded devices with Speex-only decoders, and applications requiring compatibility with older voice communication infrastructure.
MP2 is the broadcast standard for DAB radio and DVB television, operating at higher bitrates and sample rates than Speex. Converting MP2 broadcast audio to Speex reduces quality significantly but produces very small files suitable for voice communication systems.
Speex includes built-in features valuable for voice applications: voice activity detection (VAD) automatically detects silence periods, comfort noise generation fills pauses naturally, and acoustic echo cancellation integrates directly with the codec. These features make Speex particularly useful in bidirectional communication systems, even though newer alternatives like Opus provide similar capabilities with better quality.
Keep in mind that Speex operates at a maximum sample rate of 32 kHz (ultra-wideband mode) and bitrates of 2-44 kbps. Any source audio exceeding these specifications will be downsampled and compressed to fit within Speex's constraints. For new projects, consider Opus instead — it is the official successor to Speex with superior quality at all bitrates. Use Speex only when legacy system compatibility is required.
Key Benefits of Converting MP2 to SPX:
- Ultra-Low Bitrate: Speex achieves clear speech at just 2-44 kbps
- VoIP Optimized: Built-in voice activity detection and comfort noise generation
- Legacy Compatibility: Works with older VoIP systems and Speex-based platforms
- Speech Focus: CELP coding specifically optimized for the human voice
- Patent Free: No licensing concerns with the open-source Speex codec
- Low Latency: Minimal encoding delay suitable for real-time communication
- Embedded Systems: Low complexity suitable for resource-constrained devices
Practical Examples
Example 1: VoIP System Integration
Scenario: A call center needs to convert MP2-format voice prompts and IVR recordings to Speex format for their legacy VoIP PBX system that only supports Speex encoding.
Source: ivr_greeting_english.mp2 (30 sec) Conversion: MP2 → SPX (16 kHz wideband, 24 kbps) Result: ivr_greeting_english.spx (18 KB) VoIP Integration: 1. Convert MP2 prompts to SPX wideband 2. Upload to Asterisk/FreeSWITCH PBX system 3. Configure IVR menu with SPX audio files 4. Test playback quality on VoIP handsets 5. Deploy across call center phone system
Example 2: Low-Bandwidth Voice Streaming
Scenario: A remote monitoring application needs to transmit voice annotations from field devices over a satellite connection with very limited bandwidth, requiring conversion from MP2 to ultra-compact Speex.
Source: field_report_042.mp2 (3 min) Conversion: MP2 → SPX (8 kHz narrowband, 8 kbps) Result: field_report_042.spx (18 KB) Bandwidth Savings: ✓ Extreme compression for voice content ✓ Clear speech at satellite-friendly bitrate ✓ Built-in VAD skips silence periods ✓ Minimal bandwidth usage for voice transmission ✓ Compatible with Speex-based receiving equipment
Example 3: Legacy Gaming Voice Chat
Scenario: A game mod maintainer needs to convert MP2 voice recordings to Speex for a legacy multiplayer game engine that uses the Speex codec for in-game voice communication.
Source: voice_taunt_pack.mp2 (10 clips, ~5 sec each) Conversion: MP2 → SPX (16 kHz wideband, 18 kbps) Result: voice_taunt_pack.spx (~5 KB per clip) Game Integration: ✓ Convert to SPX for legacy game engine compatibility ✓ Match existing voice chat codec settings ✓ Maintain consistent audio quality with in-game voice ✓ Small file size for fast network transmission ✓ Compatible with Speex-based voice chat module
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Q: Why would I convert MP2 to SPX (Speex)?
A: The main reason is compatibility with legacy VoIP systems, embedded devices, or older voice chat applications that specifically require Speex encoding. Speex is also useful when you need extreme compression for voice content at bitrates as low as 2 kbps. For new projects, consider Opus instead.
Q: Will converting MP2 to SPX lose audio quality?
A: Yes — significantly. Speex is designed for speech at very low bitrates (2-44 kbps) and operates at a maximum sample rate of 32 kHz. Any audio content beyond the speech frequency range will be lost, and overall fidelity will be substantially reduced compared to MP2.
Q: Can Speex handle music or just speech?
A: Speex is designed exclusively for speech. It uses CELP algorithms tuned for the human voice. Music will sound very poor in Speex — metallic, narrow, and heavily distorted. For music, use Opus, OGG Vorbis, or another general-purpose codec.
Q: What is the best Speex mode for voice quality?
A: Ultra-wideband mode (32 kHz) at the highest quality setting provides the best Speex voice quality at about 44 kbps. Wideband (16 kHz) at medium quality is the most common balance. Narrowband (8 kHz) is only for telephone-grade voice.
Q: Should I use Speex or Opus for VoIP?
A: Use Opus — it is the official successor to Speex, provides better quality at all bitrates, handles both speech and music, and is the mandatory codec for WebRTC. Use Speex only when you must support legacy systems that cannot decode Opus.
Q: Does Speex support stereo audio?
A: Yes, Speex supports stereo encoding through its intensity stereo mode. However, stereo Speex is primarily for voice and does not provide the spatial quality of general-purpose codecs. Most Speex usage is mono.
Q: What file extension does Speex use?
A: Speex audio files use the .spx extension and are stored in the Ogg container format. The files can also appear as .ogg with Speex codec identification. Our converter produces standard .spx files in Ogg containers.
Q: How small can a Speex file be?
A: Extremely small. At 8 kbps narrowband, a 1-minute voice recording takes only about 60 KB. At the minimum 2.15 kbps rate, roughly 16 KB per minute. This extreme compression makes Speex valuable for very low-bandwidth applications.