This sound effect can be found on The Edge Edition Volume 1, which was made by The Hollywood Edge.
The transmission contains what appears to be coordinated radio communication, with one speaker requesting a position update “after 170 east,” and another responding with “43 north, 180 east.” When this exchange is broken down, one can understand the context: the use of directional coordinates such as “north” and “east” indicates positional reporting, which is commonly associated with navigation rather than standard police dispatch. The phrase “stand by” suggests that further instructions or clearance will be given, while “your flight will go through” implies approval to proceed along a route. Additionally, “Delta 1566” is instructed to switch to a primary frequency (“5574”), reinforcing the idea of controlled communication over designated channels. The repeated acknowledgments like “roger” and “good day” reflect standard radio etiquette used to confirm receipt and conclude transmissions.
As of 2026, the speakers are engaged in a structured communication exchange resembling air traffic coordination, where positions, routing, and frequency changes are being managed rather than a ground-based police incident.
Sound Effect Description
Police Radio, Police / CB Radio Tuning, Various Voices.
Clean, Full Length and Unedited Link to the Sound Effect
Used In
Movies
- Air Force One (1997) (Partially heard.)
Video Games
- Cabela's 4x4 Off-Road Adventure
- Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six (A portion of the sound is used, as "A_AMBCHT".)
Anime
Image Gallery
Audio Samples