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Tahurihia Tō WMV Tuhinga o mua WAV kōnae ngawari

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Me pēhea te huri WMV Tuhinga o mua WAV

Hipanga 1: Tukuatu tō WMV ngā kōnae mā te whakamahi i te pātene i runga ake nei, mā te tōia me te whakataka rānei.

Hipanga 2: Pāwhiritia te pātene 'Tahuri' hei tīmata i te tahuritanga.

Hipanga 3: Tikiake i tō mea kua tahurihia WAV kōnae


WMV Tuhinga o mua WAV Ngā Pātai Auau mō te Tahuritanga

How do I extract the audio from my WMV file as WAV?
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Upload the WMV file and the converter demuxes the audio stream, then transcodes it to WAV. There is no second video pass — the visual track is discarded immediately so extraction is much faster than a full re-encode.
Default bitrate for lossy WAV is 192 kbps, which is transparent for music. You can override to 320 kbps (audiophile) or 96-128 kbps (voice / podcast / smaller file). The bitrate dropdown is exposed in the advanced options before you click convert.
If WAV is lossless (WAV, FLAC), every sample is preserved exactly. If WAV is lossy (MP3, AAC, OGG, Opus), the WAV codec recompresses the source audio — at 192 kbps the result is transparent for almost all content. Going lossy → lossless never recovers detail already discarded.
By default yes — 48 kHz audio in your WMV stays 48 kHz in the WAV output. For CD-burning or legacy player compatibility you can downsample to 44.1 kHz via the sample-rate dropdown; the resampler is high-quality SoX-grade.
Yes — drop a folder of WMV files and we extract audio in parallel. Premium users get more parallel workers; on a 50-file batch this is the difference between a couple of minutes and ten-plus minutes.
If the WMV carries chapter or stream metadata, we copy title / artist / album fields into the WAV container. If not, the WAV comes out untagged — use a tag editor (Mp3tag, Picard) post-export for richer tagging.
Audio demux + encode is fast — typically 5 to 15% of the source duration. A 1-hour WMV → WAV finishes in roughly 3 to 9 minutes on the standard pipeline; Premium parallelism cuts this further for batch jobs.
Not in this tool directly — extract the full audio as WAV, then use /audio-trim/ or /audio-cutter/ to clip the section. The two-step path is usually faster than a combined operation and gives you precise waveform-level control.
Yes — same privacy model as every conversion: isolated workers, no human review, automatic deletion within minutes of completion. The detailed retention window is on /privacy/.
Almost always a wrong-stream selection: WMV had multiple audio tracks and the demuxer picked an empty or auxiliary stream. Use the advanced "audio stream" picker to select stream 0, 1, 2 explicitly, or target a WAV container that supports multi-track output (FLAC, OGG).
Channel layout is preserved from WMV by default — a 5.1 WMV produces a 5.1 WAV if the WAV codec supports it (AAC, FLAC, OGG, Opus). The downmix option forces stereo or mono — useful for podcast workflows where surround tracks waste bitrate.
MP3 plays everywhere with zero compatibility risk. AAC plays on Apple, most Android, and Sonos. OGG / Opus needs a recent player on iOS. The advanced device-preset dropdown picks the WAV codec most likely to play on your target hardware.

WMV

WMV (Windows Media Video) Ko te hōputu kōpeketanga ataata whakawhanakehia e Microsoft. Kei te whakamahia nuitia mo te roma me nga ratonga ataata ipurangi.

WAV

Ka rongoatia te oro e ngā kōnae WAV i te hōputu kāore i kōpeketia, ka puta he oro kounga CD, he mea tino pai mō ngā mahi oro ngaio.


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