Fabville
Well-known member
- First Name
- Kevin
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2020
- Threads
- 16
- Messages
- 336
- Reaction score
- 400
- Location
- Washington State
- Website
- www.fabville.com
- Vehicles
- 2020 Tesla Model X, 2015 Model S P85D, AWD CT
2024.14.3 has fixed this.
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2024.14.3 has fixed this.
Sure, the same way people are making it funny quotes. It's in the first page of the thread.Mine is much louder and it’s a really strange sound. Not sure what it is. Is there still no way to just make it the regular horn toot?
Do all custom sound files need to be in .wav format‽ I hope not.Pick a sound under boombox option or put a lockchime.wav on the USB in the glovebox
Why would you care what sound format the file must be, as long as the required format is ubiquitous, and the .WAV format certainly is,Do all custom sound files need to be in .wav format‽ I hope not.
Your objection is the file size and compatibility of the .WAV format for playing lock sounds?I’ve been allergic to wav files from my teenage years being a Mac user. It didn’t use to play well without Windows so I’ve stayed away from it. I don’t mind the lossless format, more so on the file size and compatibility.
Oh good to know!Actually it's not a horn lock, it's a new Cyber sound, only way I can describe it. I like it.
My initial objection to the .wav format is no longer an issue. In my younger years working on a Mac, .wav formats were not as widely supportted compared to Windows OS as it was a format created by IBM. (I'm dating myself here ?) My compatibility concern is not for the ability to play the .wav files on the Cybertruck, rather if I am able to render and hear what the audio files sound like on my Mac in order to pick a fitting sound. Since I'm still working on a Mac today, I thought this may still be an issue. However after doing some more research, most of the incompatibility issues seems to have been solved by a number of different media players now.Your objection is the file size and compatibility of the .WAV format for playing lock sounds?
Maybe I'm still misunderstanding you, but I don't understand your specific objection here. I'm trying to understand, but it's not making sense.
The Mac will play WAV, but has only minimal tools for editing them. I ended up exporting from Garageband, but still had to use VLC to re-export as mono in order to stay under the 1MB limit.My initial objection to the .wav format is no longer an issue.