Sentences with phrase «perceptible noises»

There's intimacy in every moment shared between family members here, often expressed through the sound design that highlights barely perceptible noises.
The title cards have also been tinted to sepia instead of white, but the black background during the main credit sequence has some perceptible noise on the BR.

Not exact matches

There is perceptible movement from the steering column over rough roads from the more expensive powerful model, and there's shuffling noises from the roof when it's closed too.
The cabin is a finely modulated soundscape of V - 12 hum, barely perceptible wind noise, and 1000 watts of Bang & Olufsen audio that uses a feedback loop to adjust equalization with speed.
The 1.6 T engine is just as quiet as the bigger fours, but emits a perceptible growl under hard acceleration that's more pleasing to the ear than the coarse noises from the 2.4 - liter four.
The cabin may not be 50 percent quieter as Dacia claims, but the reduction in wind, tire, and engine noise is decidedly perceptible.
The ride is luxury - quiet, with barely any road, wind or engine noise perceptible from inside the cabin.
However, if you push the engines a bit further, noise becomes perceptible in the cabin.
On smooth highways the XC90 is the consummate cruiser, the cabin is hushed and road noise is barely perceptible.
No matter what speed you drive at, there's almost no perceptible road noise inside the Mulsanne, such is the level of sound deadening.
Wind noise is not perceptible.
Ultrasound bark collars, on the other hand, work by producing an ultrasound noise not perceptible by humans, whereas electronic bark collars work by delivering a mild shock.
The perceptible (and perhaps measurable) impact of global warming on hurricanes in today's climate is arguably a pittance (or noise) compared to the reorganization and modulation of hurricane formation locations and preferred tracks / intensification corridors dominated by ENSO (and other natural climate factors).
The Commission noted that noise levels predicted at any non-associated dwelling were expected to not exceed 30 dB (A) and that infrasound was not expected to be perceptible at any dwelling.
They were also more likely to experience depressive symptoms when living in areas with lower levels of perceptible pollution (noise and odours).
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