This is an old 70's phone, i pick up the receiver, dial a few times and ring off afterwards. Recorded on 44,1 24-bits with a shure ksm27 large-membrane condensor mic.
Dialing the number 3. The dial plate telephone "fetap 611-2" (fernsprechtischapparat) in screaming orange was distributed by the german bundespost from 1972 on. It uses a real bell for ringing and of course it can only do pulse dialing. This was recorded with a single røde nt5 microphone via a behringer ddx3216 digital console into ardour. Normalized over all dial pulse samples of this set. Edit feb 2020: i changed the license to cc0 since i myself use cc0 material from freesound these days a lot.
Some birds singing before night. Record is interrupted by a message received on the phone which vibrate :/. An eventful record which also shows human technology impact on nature. Location: nono, cordoba, argentina.
Phone-ringing from a distance, a baby crying somewhere, teenagers laughing, birds chirping, old chinese music playing from a radio, seniors playing chinese chess.
Here's a quick noise removed sample of an htc thunderbolt vibrating while placed on a blanket. From what i've heard, this is the cleanest vibrate recording on freesound.
This is a recording made in the room of my apartment while i am testing an eachine e130 radio controlled helicopter, during the recording even a small helicopter crash is heard at one point. Recorded with the shure mv88 plus digital stereo microphone connected to my iphone 12 pro.
This recording was made inside the room of my apartment in italy in the province of rieti, where i am carrying out a second flight test of my eachine e130 single-rotor radio-controlled helicopter, during the recording we also hear some small incidents. Recorded with the shure mv88 plus digital stereo microphone connected to my iphone 12 pro.
In the "word association game" (on this forum) i wrote mangle, as word no 2795. I zoomed in to my post. Made a screen dump. Cropped out “2795 – mangle”. Saved as a monochrome bitmap. Opened in audacity as raw data. Applied paulstretch. Got this swoosh-sound. Let me know if you use it :-).