Title |
Car Horns #soundeffects |
Board | SFX Studio |
Format | MP3 |
Length | 13 seconds |
Plays | 3 plays |
Auto Transcribed | No |
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#soundeffects
Veteran WW2 planes flying overhead.
Low frequency, sub bass, bomb sound effect.
Slightly lower pitch than the first idle sound. No modulation to the hum.
The sound of a rocket blasting off into space.
Sound of a cheap ringing cordless telephone.
Sound of an outtake beep from a film reel.
Just your typical car horn sound.
Simulated explosion sound effect.
Droning plane engine noise. Airplane seat belt sign going off.
Black crow crying.
1970s tractor engine. Starting up. Idling. Driving away.
Wrong answers only.
Dying Pac Man vintage video game sound.
Single lightsaber swing created using microphone feedback like in the original Star Wars movies.
Scary sounds to use in the background of a horror film.
Creepy ambient track for scary film.
Short burst of electricity. Electric zap sound.
Uplifting pizzicato strings.
Composite booming crash sound effect.
Single microwave beep.
Accidental recording of a rewinding magnetic tape during digitisation.
Dangerous spark-spraying cable sound.
Vintage airplane sound.
Beeping sound of a heart monitor. Hospital cardiac machine. Flatline.
The sound of tape being wound back on a reel to reel recorder.
The sound of a military alarm or warning alert.
Steady heart rate. Speeds up. Flatlines.
Self-checkout scanner sound.
Gray noise, also known as grey noise, is a type of random signal that has an equal amount of energy per octave. It provides a balanced distribution of frequencies, similar to pink noise but without the emphasis on low frequencies. Gray noise is utilized in various applications, including audio engineering, sound masking, and tinnitus treatment.
Car horns: the sound of being stuck in city traffic.
High-voltage travelling arc. Electricity sound effect.
The sound of a cassette being wound forward created from composite samples.
The sound of distant car horns on a suburban street.
Brief explosion sound. Could be used for a blaster sound, too.
Biplane sound effect.
It's past midnight and you're all alone in a dark cabin in the woods. Suddenly, you hear some knocking and creaking coming from upstairs...
Bad beep. Incorrect. Wrong answer buzzer sound.
Short metallic explosion.
The sound of a diesel tractor driving.
The sound of an ambulance driving by.
The sound of a camcorder tape rewinding.
Ghastly sighs of a ghost or death eater.
Electric beeps that indicate failure. Game over sound.
Several children's music boxes layered together. For that slightly unhinged sound.
Stereo sound of an aeroplane passing overhead from right to left.
Looping police siren.
Winner sound from quiz show.
Vinyl record slowing to a stop.
Call the exorcist! Spooky whispers for ghostly possession scene.
Nice and punchy gunshot sound effect.
The sound of many crows calling out together.
White noise refers to a random signal with an equal intensity at all frequencies within a given range. It contains an infinite number of frequencies with equal amplitudes, resembling the sound of static. White noise is often used in audio engineering, research, and sleep aids for its masking properties.
That unsettling sucking sound that Hannibal Lecter makes with his teeth, but with reverb!
Deep bass boom sound. Perfect for punctuating a scene.
Recording of a cawing hooded crow.
Composite explosion sound.
The start-up sound of a tractor engine.
High suspense cinematic boom.
Talking dementor ghost sound. Stretched and filtered in Audacity.
horror, thriller, suspense sound.
The sound of a crying baby.
The sound of a heartbroken woman crying.
Humming saber standing idle.
Scary deep bass. Dark ambient. Perfect for horror or slasher film.
Large Boeing aircraft passing overhead.
The sound of cows mooing inside a farm shed. Birds are also audible.
Pink noise, also known as 1/f noise or flicker noise, is a type of random signal in which the power density decreases as the frequency increases. It has a more balanced energy distribution across frequencies compared to white noise. Pink noise is commonly used in acoustics, neuroscience, and audio testing.
Sound of a buzzing electric lamp.
Strings that chill you to the bone.
Ghostly sounds effects.
Bomb goes boom. Recording of a real controlled explosion.
Sole raven doing his thing.
Purple noise, also referred to as violet noise, is a type of random signal with a power spectral density that increases by 6 dB per octave as the frequency increases. It is characterized by a strong emphasis on high frequencies and is often used in audio testing, psychoacoustics, and as a musical effect.
Submarine radar sound.
That classic dramatic sound. Created using layered orchestral instruments.
Single calls of a crow.
Scratching vinyl sound to indicate error of some kind. Often used for comedic effect.
Uplifting drone. Could be used to indicate enlightenment or a revelation.
Green noise, also known as the mid-frequency component of white noise, serves various purposes. It is utilized in halftone dithering and as bounded Brownian noise for audio circuit testing. It is marketed as the ambient background noise of the world, simulating natural settings with minimal human-made sounds. Green noise shares similarities with pi...
Dark and eerie entrance music for a ghastly ghoul.
The sound of a man crying and whimpering.
Trolleybus stopping at a city bus stop.
Brown noise, also called red noise or random walk noise, is a type of audio signal that has a power density that decreases by 6 dB per octave as the frequency increases. It is deeper and lower in pitch compared to white and pink noise, resembling the sound of a rumbling or thunder. Brown noise is often used for relaxation, masking distractions, and...
The sound of a tractor plowing in a field.
Sound from a vintage 90s answering machine.
The droning sound of a moving tractor.
The sound of buses on a city street.
Building tension with a couple of reversed low notes of a piano.
Another sad trombone sound. This time with a bit of wah wah and played slower.
Electric school bell sound.
Signalling beacon from a long lost space craft.
Electronic beeping alarm clock sound. Short.
Created by time stretching a couple of reversed cello samples.
Electronic noise. Censor sound. Censor bleep. 1 second.
The sound of a rewinding tape player.
The sound of a vide cassette player rewinding and then ejecting the tape.
Sound of a school bus arriving and departing.
Velvet noise, also called burgundy noise, is a type of random signal characterized by a smooth and continuous spectrum. It combines the properties of white and pink noise, exhibiting a balanced energy distribution across frequencies with a gentle roll-off. Velvet noise finds applications in audio engineering, psychoacoustics, and electronic testing...
In-car seatbelt warning beep/sound.
Fighter jet flying overhead.
Simulated rocket blast sound effect.
sad, melancholy, melody, peaceful, meditative.
Feedback drone for building suspense.
Zapping, whooshing rocket fuel explosion.
A few bars of a scary piano melody.
The drone of an idling tractor.
Over the top monster or villain laugh for scary movie.
Blue noise, also known as azure noise, is a type of random signal characterized by a high-frequency emphasis. It has a power spectral density that increases as the frequency increases, creating a sharper and more pronounced distribution of high-frequency components. Blue noise is often used in digital imaging, dithering, and anti-aliasing technique...
Possibly the creepiest sound you will ever hear! Recording of a real life scary clown.
A convoy of police vehicles racing by with blaring sirens.
Driving. Recording made from inside the car.
The future of computing in 5 seconds.
Classic sad trombone sound.
This is your captain speaking. We're about to experience some turbulence. Please fasten your seatbelts.
Pulsing submarine scanner sound.
Electronic error buzzer sound.
The sound of a lightsaber being switched on. Reverse the sample if you need the turning off sound.
Please remain seated. We're about to experience some turbulence.
The sound of a cawing crow.
Ambient sounds of an ordinary city street in the middle of the day.
Stereo binaural recording.
Morning birdsong recorded in a forest just before sunrise.
Sound of birds singing outside the bedroom window.
Sound of a rooster calling cock a doodle doo in the morning.