YOU MIGHT CONSIDER GETTING THE WHEEL BEARINGS CHECKED, IF IT SOUNDS LIKE IT'S COMING FROM THE WHEELS (PARTICULARLY WHEN YOU ARE TURNING). THE TENSIONER WHEEL AND BOGEY WHEELS ON THE SERPENTINE BELT (FAN BELT) SOMETIMES DO THAT, TOO.
due to stringed instruments having a a tall neck, the higher you pluck the strings on the neck, the more louder it will be!
The saxophone gets louder when the player blows more air through the mouthpiece or blows harder. You can get that raunchy growling sax sound by humming loudly into the mouthpiece instead of just blowing air.
"Lubb" is louder because the turbulence associated with the closure of the a/v valves is greater and louder than the turbulence associated with the closure of the s/l valves (dupp). Remember, the systolic pressure is higher, thus the stoppage of pressure will be higher.
the vibrations made by the tuning fork cause the paper to preduce a humming sound.
No, they make a higher-pitch sound - a squeak not a boom.
the engine the engine
the humming noise is coming from a bad ground on you stereo
A humming noise on a 1999 Park Avenue is caused by bad wheel bearings. When bearings are loose or worn they will create a loud humming noise that will get louder and louder as the car accelerates.
Stereo interference?
wel i know that it has louder louder louder and higher higher higher but i do not know the answer which is a shame because it's really good
Just throwing it out to have your wheelbearings checked, humming can mean that they are about to break! if it keeps gettig louder and louder, the longer you wait, it could break while you are driving !!
it would most likely be the bearings but in some cases sometimes the axle make a humming noise when traveling at high speeds.(front wheel drive)
mosquitos are smaller so when they breathe rapidly the sound is higher pitched. Humming birds are larger so the sound of them beating their wings are louder. hope i helped.
due to stringed instruments having a a tall neck, the higher you pluck the strings on the neck, the more louder it will be!
The saxophone gets louder when the player blows more air through the mouthpiece or blows harder. You can get that raunchy growling sax sound by humming loudly into the mouthpiece instead of just blowing air.
I'll take a guess and say your blower fan is about to crap out-just try humming louder,just kidding, but if you start to smell and taste anti-freeze and there is no heat, that would be your heater core.
For me it was the idler pully. A pretty cheap part. $15 I think. And only an hour or so to change. The problem was the bearing in it was shot. It would make a whining sound that got louder/higher pitch as the engine revved higher.