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Updated Wednesday, November 9th, 2005 at 12:00am

Turning MP3 audiobooks into iPod audiobooks

The best feature of the iPod’s audiobook format is the ability to resume playback at a particular point even if you play something else or turn the iPod off. There are many online services where you can obtain audiobooks, but most of them are in MP3, which the iPod just treats as regular music. With a few steps, it is easy to convert MP3 files (or any other filetype that iTunes can play) into the native iPod audiobook format. There are a lot of different methods out there, but the following steps work nicely for me.

Before you begin

For best results, you should not upload audiobooks that are larger than 320MB or longer than 5 hours. This can cause playback and stability problems. If you have files larger than this, splitting them up into smaller parts is recommended.

Most audiobooks that you download will be in multiple files. I personally like combining these into a single file so I do not have to remember which file I am listening to. It also keeps the audiobooks menu on my iPod much easier to read. I simply let the iPod remember my position in the audiobook when I come back to it. It is just personal preference.

Most audiobooks will be far less than 320MB and 5 hours long, so if you want, you can combine your MP3s into a single file before you begin. MP3 Merger is a great freeware program.

Configuring iTunes

Before you convert the files, iTunes must be set properly. You should only have to do this once. In the iTunes menu (I am using version 6), select the following:

Edit > Preferences > Advanced > Importing

Make sure “Import Using” is set as “AAC Encoder“.

Change “Setting” to “Custom” and set the following options:

Bit Rate: 64kbs (this is a nice average setting for most audiobooks)
Channels: Stereo (fixes an issue with homemade mono files on some iPods)
Check “Optimize for Voice

Instructions

Add the files you want to convert to your library. Once they are there, select the file(s), right-click, and select “Convert Selection to AAC“. This will add the newly converted files to your library.

Once the conversion is complete, remove the original files from your library. They will no longer be needed for this process.

You can also remove the newly created files from your library, but when you are asked, be sure to select “Keep Files“, so they are not deleted off your hard drive.

The files are created under “My Documents\My Music\iTunes\iTunes Music(unless you told iTunes otherwise), so open up that folder.

You will notice that the new files have the .m4a extension. They must be renamed to .m4b.

Now that the files are renamed, you can add them to your iTunes library once again.

Right-click on the new file(s) in your library and select “Get Info“.

You can change the name of the file(s) on this screen. If you like, you can clear out the “artist” and “album” fields, so that they do not show up with the rest of your music on the iPod (when you are looking at albums or artists). They will still show up under “audiobooks” of course.

You can also change the genre of the files to “Audiobooks” using the iTunes tag editor, to make the files easier to find when looking through iTunes.

All you have to do now is add the files to your iPod. They should work just like any iTunes audiobook. They will show up under the “Audiobooks” menu on your iPod, your playback position will be remembered, and they will not get played during song shuffles.

Conclusion

I take no responsibility if you mess anything up, but as long as you follow these steps, it should work fine.

I have a fourth generation iPod. While this method works great for me, I cannot promise that it will work for all revisions.

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  1. 135
    Dan

    To convert any video file into another video file, I use Magic DVD ripper, and use it for all my ipod vids. It works wonderfully.

    On another note, its pretty dumb for this walkthrough to tell you everything about how to do it, except for the part where you actually do it. “They must be renamed…” No shit! sure am glad I read through this so you could tell me that!

    How about we just summarize this and say: Google “convert mp3 to audiobook” and download some software that says it can do it.

    I think that this might be better, and its only one sentence long. Plus that added bonus where it doesn’t waste all this time so you can say “these will need to be renamed…”

  2. 134
    GolfDude

    Can anyone help me to convert an MP4 Movie to play on my 30 gig Video Ipod?

  3. 133
    Ian

    There is an even easier option.. upload the mp3 in to your “music” section, then highlight tracks and hit CTRL-I. There you can select “Skip while shuffling” and “Remember position” - then create a playlist for the book.

    You can always come back to the position you left off and don’t have the hassle of getting Chapter 48 in the middle of a music mix..

  4. 132
    Karla

    I’m not sure why, this doesnt work for mine. The only problem I see is that the size is too big, but I don’t think that would be the problem. I really want to figure this out and get it working, so if anybody knows how to fix this, please let me know!

    karlarw8@yahoo.com

  5. 131
    wootwoot

    awesome!! i got crackling too but if that’s the case, use Apple Lossless instead of AAC. Perfect!! Thankyou so much, it was starting to get to me that my audiobooks werent in the ‘Audiobook’ section

  6. 130
    Lily

    This worked perfectly for me, thank you so much for these instructions.

  7. 129
    Pio

    I just tried the http://www.freeipodsoftware.com. Worked well.

    With the original instructions here I could not complete the manual tasks - some merges had 30 min instead of 4 hours or itune AAC conversion stopped in the middle with error -50. I was converting a language course. Thanks everyone or tips.

  8. 128
    Katie

    For those with background distortion - convert using Apple Lossless and then continue with the normal steps. Using AAC, I got fuzz, with lossless, it is perfectly clear :) Hope that helps

  9. 127
    Sean

    I am also getting background distortion (hissing, crackling sound) that definitely was not in the original mp3’s.

  10. 126
    Ares64

    I did everything you said & it worked fine…Thanx this was great…bbbuuuttt..I now hear the audiobooks with some backround distortion..is there anyway to clear this up?

  11. 125
    Michael

    Well, this was the cat’s meow. Perfect directions. And do yourself a favor and download this free renamer program. It’s called Renamer.exe, and you can get it from Majorgeeks.com

    Whoot!

  12. 124
    hilary

    OMG thanks so much! I converted it to mp4 and it worked. I never heard of pushing that convert to acc button. My dark shadows audiodramas used to play for 5 min, then skip back to beginning. It was horrible! Thanks again.

  13. 123
    rachel zhang

    I have problems with putting the text of the audiobook into the ipod.I usually put the lyrics into ipod by adding the lyrics to the file’s into, it worked with the songs,but why it doesn’t work with the .m4b audiobook. It showed in the itunes but it was just not in the ipod when I start to play the audiobook.How do I deal with that?

  14. You can just use the cat command in terminal

    Have all the files in one directory and then CD to that directory. Then simply type this in

    $cat * > xxx.mp3

    Where “xxx” would be whatever you wanted to call it.

    Obviously this required basic terminal skill.

  15. Use Audacity to combine the mp3s then follow instructions

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