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Audio Conversion

Convert 3GA to OGG — Free Online Converter

Convert 3GPP Audio (.3ga) to Ogg Vorbis (.ogg) online for free. Fast, secure audio conversion with no watermarks or registration....

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วิธีแปลง

1

Upload your .3ga file by dragging it into the upload area or clicking to browse.

2

Choose your output settings. The default settings work great for most files.

3

Click Convert and download your .ogg file when it's ready.

About 3GA to OGG Conversion

OGG (Ogg Vorbis) is the open-source lossy audio format developed by the Xiph.Org Foundation as a patent-free alternative to MP3 and AAC. Ogg Vorbis provides excellent audio quality at low bitrates and is natively supported on Android, Linux, Firefox, Chrome, and most open-source software. Converting 3GA recordings from old Samsung and Nokia phones to OGG is ideal for users who prefer open standards and want their audio to work seamlessly in the open-source ecosystem.

The conversion transcodes the AMR audio from the 3GA container into Vorbis-encoded audio inside the Ogg container. Vorbis uses a more sophisticated psychoacoustic model than MP3, achieving better quality at the same bitrate — particularly at lower bitrates below 128 kbps where the difference is most audible. For voice recordings from 3G-era phones, OGG Vorbis at 96-128 kbps provides transparent quality with smaller file sizes than equivalent MP3.

Why Convert 3GA to OGG?

Android uses Ogg Vorbis as its preferred audio format in many system contexts. Android notification sounds, alarm tones, and system UI audio are typically stored as OGG files. If you want to use converted phone recordings as Android ringtones, notifications, or alarm sounds, OGG is the most natively integrated format on Android devices.

OGG is also the standard audio format for open-source game engines like Godot, web applications built with Web Audio API in Firefox, and Linux-based media systems. The Ogg container and Vorbis codec are completely patent-free and royalty-free, making them the ethical choice for projects that avoid proprietary codecs. Xiph.Org's reference encoder and decoder are BSD-licensed, ensuring the format remains free for any use case.

Common Use Cases

  • Use converted voice recordings as Android notification sounds, ringtones, or alarm tones
  • Add old phone recordings to open-source game projects using the Godot or Unity engines
  • Integrate voice recordings into Linux-based media and kiosk systems that prefer OGG
  • Create patent-free audio files for projects with strict open-source licensing requirements
  • Embed converted recordings in web applications using the Web Audio API with OGG source

How It Works

FFmpeg decodes the AMR audio from the 3GA container and re-encodes it using the libvorbis encoder at quality level 5 (approximately 160 kbps VBR) inside the Ogg container. Vorbis uses variable bitrate (VBR) encoding by default, allocating more bits to complex passages and fewer to simple sections. The -q quality scale ranges from -1 (lowest, ~45 kbps) to 10 (highest, ~500 kbps). For AMR voice source material, quality level 3 (approximately 112 kbps) is more than sufficient for transparent reproduction.

Quality & Performance

Vorbis provides excellent quality for voice content, especially at lower bitrates where it outperforms MP3. At quality level 5 (~160 kbps), the encoding is completely transparent for AMR source material from 3G-era phones. At quality level 2 (~96 kbps), Vorbis still sounds transparent for narrowband speech, making OGG the most space-efficient lossy option for old phone recordings. The VBR encoding adapts to the content, using fewer bits during silence and more during speech.

FFMPEG EngineFastMinimal Quality Loss

Device Compatibility

Device3GAOGG
Windows PCPartialPartial
macOSPartialPartial
iPhone/iPadPartialPartial
AndroidPartialNative
LinuxPartialNative
Web BrowserNoNative

Recommended Settings by Platform

Spotify

Resolution: N/A

Bitrate: 320 kbps

OGG Vorbis preferred

Apple Music

Resolution: N/A

Bitrate: 256 kbps

AAC format required

SoundCloud

Resolution: N/A

Bitrate: 128 kbps

Lossless FLAC/WAV for best quality

Podcast

Resolution: N/A

Bitrate: 128 kbps

MP3 mono for spoken word

Tips for Best Results

  • 1Use quality level 3 for AMR voice recordings — higher settings waste space without audible benefit for narrowband speech
  • 2OGG is the best format for Android system sounds — ringtones, notifications, and alarms all accept OGG natively
  • 3For web embedding, provide OGG alongside MP3 as a fallback since Safari does not support OGG natively
  • 4Vorbis VBR encoding is very efficient for speech — expect files 20-30% smaller than equivalent MP3 at similar quality
  • 5OGG is completely patent-free — ideal for open-source projects with strict licensing requirements

Related Conversions

OGG Vorbis is the ideal format for open-source ecosystems, Android system audio, and projects that require patent-free audio codecs. It offers excellent quality-to-size ratio for voice recordings and is natively supported on Android, Linux, and all major web browsers.

คำถามที่พบบ่อย

Not natively. iOS does not support OGG Vorbis in the Music app or Files app. You would need VLC for iOS or another third-party player. For Apple devices, use M4A or AAC instead.
At the same bitrate, OGG Vorbis provides noticeably better quality than MP3, especially below 128 kbps. However, MP3 has wider device support. OGG is the better technical choice when the target supports it.
Yes. Android natively supports OGG for ringtones, notifications, and alarm sounds. You can set OGG files through Settings > Sound or by placing them in the Ringtones, Notifications, or Alarms folders.
Quality level 3 (~112 kbps) is more than transparent for AMR source material. Quality level 5 (~160 kbps) provides extra headroom. Going higher wastes space for voice content from old phones.
Yes. Chrome, Firefox, Edge, and Opera all support OGG Vorbis natively in the HTML5 audio element. Safari is the only major browser that does not support OGG.

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