715 results - ≤ 1s. - Most Popular
Quenching, cooling #3

Cooling a hot object with water. This is a welder in a glass. UCS Category: FIRESizz. Length: 00:01.
Hi-hat #4

Sound of an open and close hi-hat struck with a wooden drumstick. UCS Category: MUSCPerc. Length: 00:01.
Jumping on wooden pontoon #2

Human jumping with feet together on a wooden pontoon. UCS Category: FEETHmn. Length: 00:01.
Cockatiel parakeet #1

Discreet and shy song of a cockatiel, from the same family as parrots. In cage. UCS Category: BIRDTrop. Length: 00:01.
Servomotor 2, 90Β° #1

Sound of a large servomotor rotating 90Β°. It is a T2M TS-315. UCS Category: MOTRSrvo, ROBTMvmt. Length: 00:01.
Body fall #4

A human falling on a tiled floor, indoors. Thanks to Kellian F. and Yoann B. UCS Category: FGHTBf. Length: 00:01.
Amplifier, connection problem #6

Noise from an amplifier when there is a connection problem. UCS Category: ELECBuzz. Length: 00:01.
Hi-hat close #1

Sound of an close hi-hat struck with a wooden drumstick. UCS Category: MUSCPerc. Length: 00:01.
Key 9 in DTMF

The audible signal when the 9 key on a telephone is pressed, in "DTMF".
DTMF stands for "Dual-Tone Multi-Frequency." It is a technology used for tone dialing. Each key on a telephone keypad emits a unique combination of two sound frequencies (one low and one high), allowing the telephone system to easily detect which key has been pressed. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:01.
Cracking ice #3

Crack of ice. Noisy with a block of ice that I crush. UCS Category: ICEBrk. Length: 00:01.
Key 4 in DTMF

The audible signal when the 4 key on a telephone is pressed, in "DTMF".
DTMF stands for "Dual-Tone Multi-Frequency." It is a technology used for tone dialing. Each key on a telephone keypad emits a unique combination of two sound frequencies (one low and one high), allowing the telephone system to easily detect which key has been pressed. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:01.
Aerospace communication beep #4

Beep that is emitted after a space conversation (Nasa, SpaceX, etc.). UCS Category: COMTran. Length: 00:01.
Snare drum #6

Sound of snare drum struck with a wooden drumstick. UCS Category: MUSCPerc. Length: 00:01.
Servomotor 1, 30Β° #2

Sound of a large servomotor rotating 30Β°. It is a Futaba S3003. UCS Category: MOTRSrvo, ROBTMvmt. Length: 00:01.
MacBook Pro trackpad, double click

A double click on the trackpad, or touchpad, of the Apple white MacBook. UCS Category: CMPTKey. Length: 00:01.
Servomotor 2, 30Β° #1

Sound of a large servomotor rotating 30Β°. It is a T2M TS-315. UCS Category: MOTRSrvo, ROBTMvmt. Length: 00:01.
Cockatiel parakeet #2

Discreet and shy song of a cockatiel, from the same family as parrots. In cage. UCS Category: BIRDTrop. Length: 00:01.
Key * in DTMF

The audible signal when the * key on a telephone is pressed, in "DTMF".
DTMF stands for "Dual-Tone Multi-Frequency." It is a technology used for tone dialing. Each key on a telephone keypad emits a unique combination of two sound frequencies (one low and one high), allowing the telephone system to easily detect which key has been pressed. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:01.
Bottle of beer, shocks #4

Shocks of bottle in glass of beer. UCS Category: FOODGware. Length: 00:01.
Servomotor 2, 45Β° #1

Sound of a large servomotor rotating 45Β°. It is a T2M TS-315. UCS Category: MOTRSrvo, ROBTMvmt. Length: 00:01.
Key # in DTMF

The audible signal when the # key on a telephone is pressed, in "DTMF".
DTMF stands for "Dual-Tone Multi-Frequency." It is a technology used for tone dialing. Each key on a telephone keypad emits a unique combination of two sound frequencies (one low and one high), allowing the telephone system to easily detect which key has been pressed. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:01.
Firecracker gun #4

Sound of a toy gun firecracker. Small groundbait also used as a clapper at the start of the race. UCS Category: TOYMech. Length: 00:01.
Audio cassette: Back music #7

Rewinding an audio cassette while playing a music recording. UCS Category: COMAv. Length: 00:01.
Key 0 in DTMF

The audible signal when the 0 key on a telephone is pressed, in "DTMF".
DTMF stands for "Dual-Tone Multi-Frequency." It is a technology used for tone dialing. Each key on a telephone keypad emits a unique combination of two sound frequencies (one low and one high), allowing the telephone system to easily detect which key has been pressed. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:01.
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