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AC3 vs WAV

AC3 vs WAV

A detailed comparison of Dolby Digital AC3 and WAV Audio — file size, quality, compatibility, and which format to choose for your workflow.

AC3

Dolby Digital AC3

Audio Files

AC3 (Dolby Digital) is a surround sound audio format used in DVDs and digital TV.

About AC3 files
WAV

WAV Audio

Audio Files

WAV is an uncompressed audio format that preserves full audio fidelity. Files are large but provide lossless, CD-quality sound. It is the standard working format in audio production and editing.

About WAV files

Strengths Comparison

AC3 Strengths

  • Universal playback on every DVD player, AV receiver, and TV box since the late 1990s.
  • Proven cinema-quality 5.1 surround encoding.
  • Mandated by ATSC digital TV in North America.
  • Mature hardware decoder adoption — zero-latency on SoCs.

WAV Strengths

  • Bit-perfect, uncompressed audio — the professional studio standard.
  • Universally supported for playback, editing, and analysis.
  • No re-encoding penalty — edit and save repeatedly with zero quality loss.
  • Simple internal structure — easy to parse programmatically.
  • Supports up to 32-bit float and 384 kHz sample rates.

Limitations

AC3 Limitations

  • Patent licensing still active — Dolby collects fees for encoders.
  • Fixed bitrate rarely below 384 kbps for 5.1 — inefficient vs AAC or Opus.
  • Legacy — E-AC-3 (Dolby Digital Plus) and AC-4 are modern successors.
  • No lossless variant in the AC-3 family (TrueHD handles that).

WAV Limitations

  • Enormous file sizes — 10 MB per minute for CD-quality stereo.
  • 4 GB size limit for standard WAV (RF64/W64 variants extend it but break compatibility).
  • No native support for cover art or rich metadata.
  • Impractical for casual listening or bandwidth-constrained delivery.

Technical Specifications

Specification AC3 WAV
MIME type audio/ac3 audio/wav
Extension .ac3
Channels Up to 5.1
Bitrates 32-640 kbps
Standard ATSC A/52, ETSI TS 102 366
Container RIFF
Typical codec PCM (uncompressed)
Bit depth 8, 16, 24, 32 bit integer or float
Sample rate Up to 384 kHz
Max size 4 GB (standard WAV), unlimited (RF64 / W64)

Typical File Sizes

AC3

  • 5.1 soundtrack (90 min @ 448 kbps) ~300 MB
  • Stereo AC-3 (60 min @ 192 kbps) ~85 MB
  • Broadcast TV hour (5.1 @ 384 kbps) ~170 MB

WAV

  • Song (4 min, CD quality) 40 MB
  • Voice memo (1 min, 16-bit 44.1 kHz) 10 MB
  • Studio master (1 min, 24-bit 96 kHz) 33 MB
  • Field recording (1 hour, 24-bit 48 kHz) 1 GB

Ready to convert?

Convert between AC3 and WAV online, free, and without installing anything. Encrypted upload, automatic deletion after 2 hours.

Frequently Asked Questions

AC3 (Dolby Digital AC3) is an audio file format used to store sound recordings — music, voice, podcasts, sound effects. The format defines how the audio samples are compressed (or stored raw), what bitrates are supported, and how metadata such as title, artist, album, and cover art is embedded. It is part of the audio files family.

WAV (Waveform Audio File Format) is an uncompressed audio format co-developed by Microsoft and IBM in 1991. It stores raw PCM audio data, providing studio-quality sound at the cost of large file sizes.

VLC, foobar2000, and the default media players on Windows and macOS handle AC3 natively. On mobile, iOS Music and Android media apps vary in their support — popular formats work everywhere; niche ones may need a dedicated app. If playback fails on a device, converting to MP3 or AAC usually solves it.

WAV files play on virtually every media player and operating system including VLC, Windows Media Player, iTunes, Audacity, and all DAWs (Digital Audio Workstations) like Pro Tools and Logic Pro.

Upload the AC3 to KaijuConverter and pick MP3, WAV, FLAC, AAC, OGG, or any other target. Our FFmpeg pipeline decodes the audio and re-encodes to the target format at sensible default bitrates (VBR ~190 kbps for music, 96 kbps for speech). Metadata and cover art travel with the audio where both formats support them.

AC3 can be lossy or lossless depending on the specific variant. Lossy variants (smaller files) discard some audio detail during compression in ways tuned to be inaudible; lossless variants preserve every sample exactly but produce larger files. For distribution, lossy at high bitrate is standard; for archival, lossless wins.