Drill spinning in open air (not actually screwing anything). If it can matter, it's a jobmate power drill. Recording equipment: samson c01u usb microphone.
Seems like a drill, saw, or pressurized air machine of some type. Recorded from a construction site. It's loud, powerful, and definitely can be used in a cinematic score.
This is the sound of a drill rig operating in a fracking field near tioga, north dakota. I believe a large electric motor is spinning the drill bit. You can hear it shut down near the end of this short sound file.
Spinning a cordless, brushless drill (check empty, no load speeds) at various bursts of different length. Some in 1st gear and some in 2nd gear; in 2nd gear the electric brake is more pronounced. Mic changes position now and again to vary the sound character.
A builder working on my house, he is using an electric chisel on a door frame. Faint voices can be heard of neighbours later on. Recorded using zoom h4n.
Actually made with distorting, bitcrushing, and downsampling a recording of an electric drill (with this type of heavy processing the source material doesn't really matter much though). No chips or tunes were harmed in the making of this sound.
Actually made with distorting, bitcrushing, and downsampling a recording of an electric drill (with this type of heavy processing the source material doesn't really matter much though). No chips or tunes were harmed in the making of this sound.
Mono recording of a small cooking blender that, after some pitching and processing, i used as a layer for a robot's movement mechanism. Format: wav 48khz 24bit monogear: oktava mc 012 -> joemeek vc1qcs -> audiofuse interface.