First, a 440hz tone will play on the LEFT side. Then, it will stop and play a 440hz tone on the RIGHT side. This is for testing which side is which, and if your stereo system is working properly.
1000 Hz tone, created by Denelson83 Note on playing this audio clip This audio clip is an en:Ogg Vorbis file. For a list of compatible media players, see the article at [1].
著者: The original uploader was Denelson83 at English Wikipedia.
First thing my husband did when my new zoom h4 pro arrived: recorded his fart for me as a symbol of our unconditional love for each other. You can even hear a pressure wave. Hubby yeahhha.
Sound of a pressure drop. Sound recorded with a zoom h4n pro. Son d’une baisse de pression. Son enregistré avec un zoom h4n pro. My sounds are licensed under the creative commons 0 license but it would be a pleasure for me to hear your work so doesn’t hesitate to comment or to send me a message with your work :).
A pressurized sound made from a very simple source - my own mouth. Filtering and stretching gives it a convincing effect of a hydraulic release. May be compatible with sounds of medical machines.
This is a new sprayer we bought and it's nice to be able to relieve the pressure by turning a small, built-in valve. Similar to a compression relief valve on engines, i suppose. I recorded it with my yamaha 'pocketrak' recorder and edited on sony vegas. Please comment on what you will use it for. Thanks. :^).
Burst of air next to a mic. It was originally intended for a bullet hitting a ballistic vest, but it obviously can work for some kind of a pressure releasing sound too.
This sound was made from a shaving cream can that was running out of shaving cream. It was edited to sound like an air pressure release sound. Use it as a hydraulic sound or whatever you want. Credit would be nice but is not required.
Sound of a pressure cooker. Sound recorded with a zoom h4n pro. Son d’une cocote-minute. Son enregistré avec un zoom h4n pro. My sounds are licensed under the creative commons 0 license but it would be a pleasure for me to hear your work so doesn’t hesitate to comment or to send me a message with your work :).
I hold a carbonated can to my microphone and open it in two motions, one to release the pressure, and the other to open the hole the rest of the way. This was a 12oz (355ml) standard soda can (specifically moxie) held in my hand a few inches from the mic, with some slight ambient humming removed in audacity afterward.
Zoom h4 held immediately at the opening of a thermos. Hot tea building up air pressure, escaping air evenly producing this squeaky sound. Low cut 1000hz for filtering out street noise.