I recorded this ringtone from my then-typical motorola ultra classic cell phone in early 1997. This version has tiny fade-in/fade-out, about one second of leading silence and two seconds trailing silence for looping. I suggest amplifying it for use on a modern cell phone.
This is just a noise taken off my home phone, it is the standard noise that plays after punching in a number. I used a direct feed for this one, although there really was not much different. This is the only sound from a direct feed that wouldn't come in so terribly soft.
Telephone gibberish like you'd hear in cartoons. Basically me shouting gibberish in audacity sped up. Feel free to use this for whatever, credit me and freesound if you wish, but you don't have to.
Old german black telephone, called w48 by siemens. Build from 1948 to the sixties. Recorded with tascam dr100 mk3 and rode nt3. Some optimizing in cubase.
This is my recording of a antique/vintage 1920's-1940's telephone picking up and hanging up. Recorded at the military aviation museum in 1341 princess anne rd, virginia beach, va 23457 during the summer of 2021.
I created a dtmf tone with an amplitude of 0. 8 and a tone/silence ratio of 550 and during 7s. Then i amplified 1. 3 db sound. And finally i multiplied the speed of 0,960.
To create this sound, i created a sinusoid of 500 hz and an amplitude of 0. 8. I then multiplied the speed of 0. 750. To get this final sound is to duplicate the sinusoid several times.
Two slowed down samples of a cell phone on vibrate (taken from previously uploaded sound "phone vibrate". Now sounds more like an engine starting up and subsiding. . . Or a really lame lawnmower.
An edited version of my "boiling water" sound to simulate a phone vibrating on a table. Recorded for my sound design class using a samsung galaxy s7 internal microphone.