OPUS to OGV Converter
Convert OPUS to OGV online at Convertig.com. Fast, free, and secure audio-to-video converter—no software needed. Upload your file and get OGV output instantly.
100 MB maximum file size and upto 5 files.
300+ formats supported
We support more than 25600 different conversions between more than 300 different file formats. More than any other converter.
Fast and easy
Just drop your files on the page, choose an output format and click "Convert" button. Wait a little for the process to complete.
How to use OPUS to OGV Converter?
- Click the “Choose Files” button to select your files (up to 20 files at a time)
- Click on the “Convert” button to start the conversion
- When the status change to Done” click the “Download” button
OPUS to OGV Converter FAQs
You would perform this specific conversion for backward compatibility with older websites or open-source software. Some legacy systems were designed to use the OGV video container with a Vorbis audio track and were created before the superior Opus codec was widely supported.
Yes, your audio will be re-encoded into a different format. The OGV container traditionally uses the older Ogg Vorbis codec for its audio stream. To ensure compatibility, your modern Opus audio is transcoded to Vorbis, a process which involves a slight but irreversible loss of quality.
When you play the converted OGV file, it will display a simple black screen for the entire duration of your audio. The OGV format is a video container, so to create a valid, playable file, our converter must automatically generate this blank video stream to package with your audio.
The OGV file is larger for two main reasons. First, a blank video track is added, which takes up its own space. Second, your hyper-efficient Opus audio is converted into the slightly less efficient Vorbis audio codec, which can require more data to store a similar-sounding track. Both factors contribute to a larger file.
For any modern project, WebM is the far superior choice. WebM is the successor to OGV, offering much more efficient and higher-quality video and audio compression; in fact, it can use the Opus codec natively! WebM is the current open-source standard for video on the web.