Yes. You can get the file via that hash with a local IPFS client, or you can try using a gateway like ipfs.io/ipfs/, cloudflare-ipfs.com/ipfs/, etc, just stick the hash on the end of the URL. You'll need a downloader that supports resuming, because a gateway is almost certainly going to timeout several times before finishing a file that large. (This is a generic "you", I know you don't need this, Uikri)
The idea is that anyone can host it, then, and a client with the hash will find available sources. If you're running a client daemon it automatically caches and makes available stuff you've downloaded. It's like a trackerless torrent via a magnet link in some ways.
Or there's this http link, but I make no promises about availability. (Really no promises about IPFS availability, either, but at least someone else could mirror it.)
I wasn't able to find a copy, but fortunately the converter source code is still up at the GitHub link, so it should be possible to convert them again.