11 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Clipping (audio)"

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Audio bug when clipping/clicking.
Author: Sharu
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00:04
Audio of clipping on reel to projector arm.
Author: Cooneysound
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00:31
Examples of digital clipping (Source: Beethoven's Fifth, 30 second cut, loudest peaks occur at 19.9, 20.7, 22.7 and 23.8 second marks). A set of five files: 1. Original, normalized to 1 dB margin to full scale. 2. +2dB overload 3. +5 dB overload 4. +10 dB overload 5. +20 dB overload
Author: Original file uploaded by user:OldakQuill
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00:31
Examples of digital clipping (Source: Beethoven's Fifth, 30 second cut, loudest peaks occur at 19.9, 20.7, 22.7 and 23.8 second marks). A set of five files: 1. Original, normalized to 1 dB margin to full scale. 2. +2dB overload 3. +5 dB overload 4. +10 dB overload 5. +20 dB overload
Author: Original file uploaded by user:OldakQuill
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00:31
Examples of digital clipping (Source: Beethoven's Fifth, 30 second cut, loudest peaks occur at 19.9, 20.7, 22.7 and 23.8 second marks). A set of five files: 1. Original, normalized to 1 dB margin to full scale. 2. +2dB overload 3. +5 dB overload 4. +10 dB overload 5. +20 dB overload
Author: Original file uploaded by user:OldakQuill
00:00
00:31
Examples of digital clipping (Source: Beethoven's Fifth, 30 second cut, loudest peaks occur at 19.9, 20.7, 22.7 and 23.8 second marks). A set of five files: 1. Original, normalized to 1 dB margin to full scale. 2. +2dB overload 3. +5 dB overload 4. +10 dB overload 5. +20 dB overload
Author: Original file uploaded by user:OldakQuill
00:00
00:31
Examples of digital clipping (Source: Beethoven's Fifth, 30 second cut, loudest peaks occur at 19.9, 20.7, 22.7 and 23.8 second marks). A set of five files: 1. Original, normalized to 1 dB margin to full scale. 2. +2dB overload 3. +5 dB overload 4. +10 dB overload 5. +20 dB overload
Author: Original file uploaded by user:OldakQuill
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00:47
Passing locomotive class 1600 with freight cars amsterdam central station. Recorded using sony pcm10 with tascam st-1 external condenser microphone. Continuous movement of train through sheltered station after it initially slowed down and sped up after the locomotive was clear of the building. Some clipping of audio at midpoint.
Author: Dendolder
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01:02
Recorded with zoom h2 at 96 khz / 24-bit. Edited and converted to flac using audacity, otherwise unprocessed. Midway through recording i have lowered my gain setting from hi to mid to avoid clipping. Some background noise (fridge) is left in for noise removal. I prefer to get raw audio from freesound i can process myself - gives me maximum options, that's why i deliver the same. Video recording:https://youtu. Be/ezqsxnbvl4o.
Author: Unfa
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00:26
Another recording of rain and thunder, but in some ways a better one. This one is a surprisingly big crack and rumble preceded and followed by a nice sounding rain. I made this by positioning a stereo-matched pair of akg c451b condenser mics in an exaggerated x-y configuration (a wider stereo field) and aiming them out of my open window. The mics went into a universal audio 2-610 preamp, an apogee duet 2, and then ableton at 48khz and 24 bits. I believe i had the mics set flat, and there was no post processing (though i was mightily tempted to upload the much-better-sounding eqed and compressed files) so that you can fine tune it to suit your needs. You'll notice that the loudest parts of the thunder boom clipped the input, but, due to the pleasant and forgiving nature of vacuum tubes, the clipping sounds more compressed than distorted. Feel free to use this sound in any commercial or artistic work! you do not need to credit me.
Author: Davidhrivnak
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00:03
We develop iphone app that perform musical analysis on recorded audio from the iphone. Our app implementation make use of the audio queue service to receive raw audio buffers from the audio queue callback. In the first version of our app we had the problem of too much clipping on the recording which degrade the accuracy of our analysis. We also suspected that the noise canceling algorithm in iphone 5 produce distorted sound, which is not much noticeable by human ear but distorted enough to affect our sensitive algorithm. We found that the solution to our problem is to set the audio session mode to kaudiosessionmode_measurement. This session mode is supposed to give maximum freedom for us to control the microphone input, which include turning off the automatic gain control and probably noise canceling as well. The solution works very well except that it introduce a strange waveform pattern in the beginning of all recordings in iphone 5. It is very hard to explain the waveform we get, so i made two recordings at freesound so that you can see it visually. The first recording is made in an almost quite environment, and you can see the weird spike in the beginning of the recording. The second recording (this recording) is made with constant background noise, and you can see that the actual sound wave is offset from the strange curve and gradually increase to its original volume. This waveform only happens on iphone 5 devices that we tested, and there is no problem at all for iphone 4s and older generations. We have tried various settings and the glitch is still unavoidable as long as we set the audio session mode to kaudiosessionmode_measurement. We also find similar glitch in one of our iphone 5 devices, in which the glitch happens even if we try to set just the input gain level without changing the session mode. We are not sure if this is a hardware-related bug in iphone 5, or if it is fixable software glitch in the future version of ios. For the moment we are looking for workaround that can avoid this glitch while automatic gain control and noise canceling are disabled.
Author: Soareschen
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