I just PM'd you. Thanks for the research!
Yes, it has been hard finding info on CAF files. Everyone says Audacity works fine, but my copy of Audacity doesn't recognize them at all.
Cool; got 'em, and they'll work with my solution! I'm assuming you're doing this on Windows, but it should work on a Mac too.
- Get MPEG Streamclip for your OS here: http://www.squared5.com/
- Once you've open MPEG Streamclip (no install needed), select List > Batch List. The Batch List window will appear.
- Click the Add Files button at the bottom of the window, and navigate to the folder where your CAF files are saved.
- The CAF files will not appear by default, so in "File name" box, type (without quotes) "*caf" to make them appear. When they do, select them all (Ctrl+A works) and click Open.
- A dialog will appear asking you to "Please choose a task;" from the dropdown, select the "Save As" option. No need to check the other options; just click OK.
- When you hit OK, you'll be presented with a folder/file browser window; navigate to your destination folder, and click OK.
- You'll then see a window that says "File open error: unsupported file type." Do not despair
Simply click "Open Anyway." - The next window will ask you to select a file format; choose MOV and click OK.
- Finally, after all that, the files will be added to the Batch List window with the parameters you just set. Simply hit the Go button, and watch the files fly!
The conversion should go very quickly, because there is no re-encoding happening. MPEG Streamclip is simply splitting the CAF container open, extracting the streams, and rewrapping them in an MOV container. They'll also be named the same as your originals. The CAF files are encoded with the Apple Lossless Audio Codec, which is a legitimate codec in QuickTime, on Windows, and even in Premiere, but the CAF container cannot be split open by anything but QuickTime (at least on a PC). MPEG Streamclip is an extremely capable front-end for QuickTime; it does just about everything QuickTime Pro does (and more, like batching) for free.
EDIT: Actually, I just noticed that your CAFs were encoded with AAC audio; the test clip I had was ALAC. Nevertheless, they import just fine.
Anyway, you will end up with a pile of MOVs with no video, but with ALAC audio streams. These import perfectly well into Premiere, and you'll have done so losslessly; compare the file sizes and you'll see that they are within a few KBs of the CAF files.
Hope that works for you!