Other SuperJet Ringtone

Hello everyone, I just recently decided to go with the masses and picked up a smartphone today. I bought the little HTC 8s Windows phone and I must admit, I love it lol. But as I toyed around with the settings and what not I thought I would hunt around for a cool ski brap for a ringtone. Well, I did find one here on the x but it wasn't quite what I was looking for so I decided to try and make my own. It actually turned out alright and I thought I would offer it to everyone here. Hopefully this link works, the sound effect is legit, it came from the Rip n' Ride 5 video on YouTube at 3:35. So hopefully it works out and have fun with it :biggrin:

http://www.hyperfileshare.com/d/945e5184
 
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That is a great tone. I have it as well...I just figured a few more options on the table might hold interest with those that like the off idle, on the trailer brap hehe. I would def. be willing to make more tones if anyone had something they needed or wanted done. Just pop up the Youtube link and the start/end times and I will give it a shot. You can't have too many braptones lol.
 

rasper99

Freighter wake hunter
Location
Portland, OR
What kind of a phone McDog? I had an Android phone before my Windows phone and it accepted mp3 formats for ringtones just as the Windows phone does. As for iPhones, I have no idea since I have not used one before. If anyone needs this tone converted into a different format feel free to let me know, it's very easy to convert and repost as a second option. I can make it anything that your phone requires... WMA, mp3, WAV ...etc.
 
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Location
USA
Can someone chime in how to convert these to the different OS, for these guys? I did it on my computer, dowloaded as zip file then transfered to my phone as media file, then selected as a ringtone. On the smartphones, I think you must first change the file name to M4A or M4R for iphone then sync with you iphone. Android you change to MP3. This all over a computer, don't know how to do it directly on your phone, sorry. Also found this.......................... [h=2]HOW TO INSTALL RINGTONES[/h]Body:
To install on an iPhone:
Step 1: Extract the ringtone file (.m4r) from the .zip file (on a Mac, this file is located in your downloads folder).
Step 2: Double-click on the ringtone file (.m4r) you have just downloaded. The
ringtone will automatically be added to your iTunes Tone library.
Step 3: Sync it to your iPhone® using iTunes.
Step 4: Set the ringtone in the Sounds section of your “Setting†app on your
phone. Enjoy your new ringtone!
To install on an Android Phone:
Step 1: Extract the ringtone file (.mp3) from the .zip file.
Step 2: Connect your device's memory to your computer.
Step 3: Open the file folder for your device.
Step 4: Create a new folder. Label it Ringtones.
Step 5: Open the folder on your computer containing the ringtones.
Step 6: Drag and drop the ringtone file (.mp3) to the Ringtones folder on your
device.
Step 7: Go to Sound Settings on your phone. When on your home screen, press
the menu/navigation hard key, and select Settings. From there, select Sound,
and the menu titled Phone ringtone. Scroll through the list of ringtones until you
find the one you want to use.
If you don't see the ringtone you just added, turn off the phone first and it should
appear when you turn it on since Android's service looks out for new files when
the phone boots.
For any additional issues, please consult the Android User's Guide provided with
your phone.
 
There are a host of audio format converters freely available, it is just a matter of hunting them up through searches. But if you know what format your phone requires then you have half the job done. All that matters at that point is finding a method of doing the converting. A program I love for all my audio modification is Audacity. Once you learn how to run it, you can edit and save audio files in a large range of formats with it. Here is the link to it...

http://audacity.sourceforge.net/download/
 
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