Mute Video
Remove every audio track while copying compatible video data into a new file.
Tool code processes selected files and entered content in your browser and does not submit them to a TOOLGRID processing endpoint. TOOLGRID measures tool usage, not the content you enter.
- No TOOLGRID input upload
- No account
- Review before copy
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What this tool does
Create a silent copy of a local video. The fast path removes audio without intentionally re-encoding the video stream when the target MP4 container supports it.
Remove audio, download the new copy, and verify that no alternate audio track remains.
Processing starts only after you choose files and press the action button. The media engine is not preloaded on the homepage or ordinary tool pages.
Where this tool earns its place
Remove speech and music before embedding a looping visual.
What to check before relying on the result
- Stream copy can fail when the source video codec is not valid in MP4.
- Removing audio is irreversible in the output; keep the original.
Open a nearby browser tool when you need to validate, convert, or reuse the result.
How to use
01Use Cases
Remove speech and music before embedding a looping visual.
Remove audio, download the new copy, and verify that no alternate audio track remains.
Tips & Tricks
- 01Start with a short representative file
Confirm codec and browser support before committing device time to a long source.
- 02Keep the source
Every output is a new file. Retain the original until you have completed a full playback check.
FAQ
02Is my media uploaded to TOOLGRID?
No. The selected files are written into an in-browser worker file system. The self-hosted encoder assets are downloaded separately, but TOOLGRID does not receive the selected media for processing.
Why can a local media job be slow?
The compatibility encoder runs single-threaded in WebAssembly and is limited by device CPU, available memory, source duration, resolution, codecs, and browser behavior.
What should I verify in the result?
Check playback, duration, seeking, video and audio synchronization, expected tracks, visual quality, and actual file size in the browser or player used by your audience.

