3 Free Chambre Sound Effects - Most Popular
One Minute of Silence

One full minute of digital silence: no noise, no room tone, just a perfectly blank stereo file you can drop anywhere in your timeline. Idealized studio silence, ready for all your tests and tricks.
To create a custom silent audio file, go to my Silence Generator.
Typical uses (based on users’ feedback):
> insert clean gaps between songs, jingles or podcast segments
> mute apps or devices that insist on playing a sound file (alarms, notification systems, in-car players, etc.)
> keep players, audio engines or Bluetooth links alive without any audible sound
> work around tools and platforms that require an audio track (force video export instead of GIF, pad the end of a file, calibrate meters, etc.)
It can also serve as a symbolic “minute of silence” in streams, events, radios or artistic projects. Free and royalty-free (CC0) for all your uses. UCS Category: TEST. Length: 01:00.
Electrocardiogram 60 Hz

An electrocardiogram beep when the heart beats at 60 Hz Or 60 beats per minute. The resting heart rate is 60 to 80 beats per minute. Learn how to make the sound effects of a heartbeat: https://www.libertivi.com/lelabodubruiteur_100. UCS Category: BEEPMed. Length: 00:09.
67 Hz electrocardiogram

Beep emitted by an electrocardiogram when the heart rate is 67 BPM (67 beats per minute). Resting heart rate is typically 60 to 80 beats per minute. Learn how to create a heartbeat sound effect: https://lasonotheque.org/dossiers/techniques-bruitage-f112.html#14. UCS Category: BEEPMed. Length: 00:09.
Download all results from this page
This action can be VERY long depending on your connection and the size of the files!
Search tips:
- Use simple keywords (1-2 words work best)
- Prefer English terms when possible
- Avoid typos and misspellings
- Try synonyms if you don't find results
- Use singular nouns (cat, not cats)
- Skip adjectives (cat not big cat)
- Avoid onomatopoeia and slang
- Don't describe what the sound is NOT
- Focus on the sound source (door, engine, bird)
- Use simple keywords (1-2 words work best)
- Prefer English terms when possible
- Avoid typos and misspellings
- Try synonyms if you don't find results
- Use singular nouns (cat, not cats)
- Skip adjectives (cat not big cat)
- Avoid onomatopoeia and slang
- Don't describe what the sound is NOT
- Focus on the sound source (door, engine, bird)