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VOB vs OPUS — Comparison & Free Converter

Fast, instant VOB to OPUS conversion. No signup required. Just drop your .vob file and get .opus in seconds.

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Generation loss — quality may degrade

VOB uses lossy compression, and so does OPUS. Converting means decoding and re-encoding — each cycle can permanently degrade quality. Convert from the original source file whenever possible.

Some metadata may not survive

Your VOB file may contain DVD IFO data metadata. OPUS has limited or no support for these metadata types. Location data (GPS), camera settings, and color profiles may be stripped during conversion.

What compression artifacts to expect

OPUS lossy compression can produce minimal artifacts even at low bitrates. At the high quality settings CocoConvert uses by default, these are usually invisible to the eye. Lower quality settings trade visual fidelity for smaller file sizes.

About VOB to OPUS Conversion

VOB or OPUS — which format should you use? The answer depends on your needs. Here's a quick breakdown.

VOB is the DVD video format containing MPEG-2 streams, audio, subtitles, and menus. It has limited platform support. Opus is a versatile open codec excelling at both speech and music, used in WebRTC and Discord. It has limited platform support.

Full Name: VOB uses DVD Video Object, while OPUS uses Opus Audio. Compression: VOB uses Lossy, while OPUS uses Lossy. Color Depth: VOB uses 8-bit, while OPUS uses —.

So when should you convert VOB to OPUS? This conversion is ideal when you You need a file that works in web browsers. This conversion helps you upgrade to a modern format.

VOB uses lossy compression, and so does OPUS. Converting means decoding and re-encoding — each cycle can permanently degrade quality. Convert from the original source file whenever possible. Common misconception: ""I'll convert to OPUS and then back to VOB — it'll be the same"" — in reality, each lossy conversion cycle permanently degrades quality. going vob → opus → vob will produce a noticeably worse file than the original. always keep your source file.

If you've decided OPUS is the right choice, CocoConvert makes the conversion effortless. Upload your .vob file, pick OPUS, and click Convert — done in seconds. The converter runs on secure servers in Germany, powered by FFmpeg, Sharp, and qpdf. Files are encrypted via TLS and erased within 24 hours.

Free tier: 5 files/hour, 250 MB each. Pro: 100 files/hour, 5 GB each. Works in every modern browser on desktop and mobile.

How to Convert VOB to OPUS

  1. 1

    Choose your VOB file

    Upload your .vob file using drag-and-drop or the file browser. Batch mode lets you add multiple files.

  2. 2

    Set format to OPUS

    Select .opus from the output options. The converter applies optimal quality settings automatically.

  3. 3

    Run the conversion

    Click Convert. Server-side processing means your device stays fast — even for large video files.

  4. 4

    Get your OPUS file

    Download your converted file instantly. Batch downloads are available as a zip archive.

What Happens When You Convert VOB to OPUS

The audio track is extracted from your VOB video file and saved as OPUS. The video frames are discarded.

1

Your VOB file is opened and the container is parsed to identify audio and video streams

2

The audio stream is extracted — if it's already in the target codec, it's copied directly (no quality loss)

3

If transcoding is needed, the audio is decoded and re-encoded as OPUS

4

Video frames, subtitles, and chapter markers are discarded

5

The OPUS file is saved with preserved metadata (title, artist, etc.) where possible

VOB vs OPUS — Detailed Comparison

Feature.VOB.OPUS
Full NameDVD Video ObjectOpus Audio
CompressionLossyLossy
Color Depth8-bit
HDR SupportNo
Typical File Size200–400 MB per minute (DVD quality)0.5–1 MB per minute at 96 kbps (near-transparent quality)
Platform SupportLimitedLimited
Browser Supportnonemodern browsers
Year Created19962012
Open StandardNoYes

Should You Convert VOB to OPUS?

When to Convert

  • You need just the audio track from a video recording
  • You're creating a podcast or audio file from video content
  • You need a file that works in web browsers

When NOT to Convert

  • You're converting just because the file "seems old" — re-encoding lossy-to-lossy always degrades quality

Common Mistakes When Converting VOB to OPUS

"I'll convert to OPUS and then back to VOB — it'll be the same"

Each lossy conversion cycle permanently degrades quality. Going VOB → OPUS → VOB will produce a noticeably worse file than the original. Always keep your source file.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I use VOB or OPUS?

It depends on your goal. VOB offers smaller files via lossy compression. OPUS offers smaller files via lossy compression. Choose based on whether file size or quality matters more for your use case.

Is OPUS higher quality than VOB?

Not necessarily. VOB uses lossy compression, and so does OPUS. Converting means decoding and re-encoding — each cycle can permanently degrade quality. Convert from the original source file whenever possible. Quality depends on the compression type and settings, not just the format name.

Can I convert VOB to OPUS on Mac and Windows?

Yes. CocoConvert is a web-based tool that works in all modern browsers — Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Edge — on any operating system including macOS, Windows, Linux, iOS, and Android.

Is CocoConvert free for VOB to OPUS?

Yes. Free users get 5 conversions per hour (250 MB each). Pro subscribers unlock 100 files per hour, 5 GB per file, and priority processing.

What tools does CocoConvert use for VOB to OPUS?

CocoConvert uses FFmpeg for audio/video, Sharp for images, and qpdf for documents — the same open-source libraries used by Netflix, YouTube, and major enterprise platforms.

Powered by — installed on our conversion workers
FFmpeg 8.1 (static)

Versions are pinned in our worker Dockerfile and re-built via CI on every change.