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Make Your Own FREE Treo Ringtones

I’ve never quite figured out the whole craze about buying ringtones – perhaps because I never felt a particularly strong inclination to pay again for just a portion of music that I typically already owned.

At the same time, even though I didn’t want to buy them I admit that ringtones were nonetheless an important issue on my Treo from day one because I found the default ringtone to be somewhat annoying and I just couldn’t seem to ‘warm’ to a single one of the other built-in tones either.  I naturally set out looking for options – preferably free ones.

To begin, the Treo 650 natively supports MIDI and WAV audio files [UPDATE: also AMR Narrowband Audio] and third-party applications such as the excellent Ringo Pro ($29.95) add further support for MP3 ringtones (hopefully Palm will see fit to add native MP3 ringtone support in the future) while at the same time providing more sophisticated functionality such as setting ringtones for individual friends and caller groups which the built-in ‘Sound & Alerts’ in Prefs on your Treo cannot do.  Also, Ringo Mobile is now available for the Treo 700w.

The biggest benefit of MIDI files is that they are _extremely_ small (typically only 10kb per minute of play) and you can find a ton of these for free online but the downside is that all you can hear are tones and not real singing voices.  Next, WAV files have the benefit of native playback and full voices but at the cost of files that can reach multiple megabytes if you choose to have an entire song in this format.  Finally, MP3 audio files are typically ideal because you will already have a large collection but the downside is that the files are again comparatively large and that you will have to buy a separate application to play them as ringtones on your Treo.

For each of the three ringtone format options – MIDI, WAV and MP3 – the option was either to 1) buy; 2) download or 3) create or edit my own.  However, as I mentioned earlier I wanted to avoid buying so I focused instead on the ‘download’ and ‘create/edit’ routes and below are the ones that I found most viable in each category.

MIDI Download:
There are an almost endless number of free MIDI download sites available and I found the three below to be at the top of my list.

However, unless you know exactly the sound or artist that you are looking for you may spend hours trawling online before you find one you’d like to use as a ringtone.

WAV Create:
I discovered that with the right application I could easily (at the click of a button) convert any of my existing MP3 files to WAV.  I found an excellent, extremely simple to use and free program for this called Switch (PC and Mac).  However, I quickly learned that converting a CD quality MP3 file (6MB) to a similar quality WAV file resulted in sizes of 40MB+… 

Obviously I would have to downgrade the quality of the WAV file if I wanted to transfer it to my Treo ‘Sounds’ folder and still have space to spare.  Switch conveniently has four preset MP3–to-WAV encoder settings and I found the ‘Radio Quality’ one at “22.050kHz, 8Bit, Mono” to be the lowest that I could go without too much audio quality loss but this still delivered a 4 minutes long audio file that was 5.3MB – way too big.

However, while testing ringtone calls on my Treo I noticed that the call would automatically be transferred to voicemail after 20 seconds which meant that I could get away with a ringtone that was only 20secs long instead of the 4 minutes that I had before.  What I needed next was therefore a program that would allow me to ‘cut’ just the portion of an existing MP3 file to fit the 20secs that I wanted to use as my ringtone.  Luckily the same developer that offers Switch have also produced another free application called WavePad Master’s Edition (PC only though) which can do just that.

After launching WavePad I opened my original MP3 file, copied a 30secs section that I wanted to use as my ringtone, further edited the beginning and end with ‘fade in’ and ‘fade out’ effects, applied an ‘auto noise reduction’ effect and then saved the 20secs file at a good quality of “32.000kHz, 8Bit, Mono” which resulted in a file of only 600kb.

MP3 Create/Edit:
As I mentioned earlier, if you woud like to use your MP3’s as ringtones you’ll need to buy a third-party application such as Ringo Pro since the built-in “Sounds & Alerts” only supports MIDI and WAV.

If you have chosen the MP3 route (as many Treonauts seem to have done lately) then you may also like to ‘cut’ your music to have just that particular section of a song that you like played back as a ringtone as opposed to the entire title.  Here again, to edit your MP3 to just the 20secs that you need for the ringtone you can also use WavePad.

Using WavePad, open your original MP3 file and find a 30secs section of music that you want to use as your ringtone and further edit down to 20secs.  Add a fade out and/or fade in effect then just select ‘Save File As’ and MP3 as the file type.  In my case the same 20secs 600kb WAV file was further reduced to just 300kb as an MP3.

Moving MIDI and WAV Files to your Treo ‘Sounds’ Folder
If you’ve chosen to go with natively supported MIDI or WAV sound files which are on your PC the next step will naturally be to transfer these to your Treo.  For this, Palm provide a useful support page: “Ringtones: changing, adding and managing on the Treo 650 smartphone”. 

I personally found that the easiest option is to email the file to yourself then opening the attachment on your Treo and saving to ‘Sounds’.

Here on the right, a screenshot of my two test WAV files now added and ready to use as ringtones within the default Treo ‘Sound & Alerts’.

Moving MP3 Files to your Treo using Ringo Pro (or other MP3 ringtone manager)
Nothing simpler than copying your MP3’s to your SD card and then opening Ringo Pro to navigate to the folder where you saved them.

Conclusion
If you’re not a huge ringtone fan but like me didn’t find one that particularly made you tick in the standard ‘Sounds’ folder on your Treo then searching and downloading a free MIDI file will be your best and fastest option.  The MIDI files are very small but you’ll only get tones and not voice.

If you want just a few more bells and whistles for your ringtones but are still not willing to pay for them then consider the option of transforming your existing MP3’s into a WAV file.  It’s quite easy once you figure out how to use WavePad which is very user friendly but the downside is that you’ll use up precious internal memory on your Treo.

Finally if you want the top of the pops and must have MP3 ringtones then I can categorically recommend that you purchase Ringo Pro (or Ringo Mobile for Treo 700w) which can play all files directly from the SD card saving you memory on your Treo.  In fact I enjoyed using Ringo Pro so much that I added it to my favourite Top 100 Software and also extended the 20% Off coupon with the code TOP100 in the Treonauts Software Store until 26 March.

UPDATE1: Simple-Stupid Ringtones
I never thought about this nor had I previously tried the built-in ‘New’ functionality within the ‘Manage Sound’ section on my Treo but I have to admit that you can come up with some pretty fun ringtones this way.

  

Thanks to s.elements for pointing me to this by writing that to record his ringtones he simply places his Treo next to a speaker playing the song that he likes and voilà! he can save it and use it in a second even while on the go – albeit the audio quality isn’t necessarily great.  As he says it’s simple-stupid.

Just for fun this is a short personal voice ringtone that I created called PickUpThePhone! [RightClick and then Save As…] which you can download, email to your Treo and listen to within the Manage Sounds panel or it should play with Quicktime in your browser…

UPDATE2: .AMR Support
To my surprise, by doing the above and then emailing the file to myself I discovered that the audio file had a .amr extension which I hadn’t come across before.  Curious, I launched WavePad again to see if it could save MP3’s in the .amr format and it did.  Saving a 6MB MP3 to the highest encoding bitrate of 12.2kbps that .amr supports resulted in a tiny 386kb file…  Great for size but the quality is only so so compared to WAV or MP3.

Treonauts always look for the best options


Posted by Andrew on March 9, 2006 at 02:59 PM

Treo Software | Ringtones

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Comments

26
by chris p | Jul 3, 2006 9:12:12 PM

I don't know if this is the NEW .prc your talking about but...

here is the Treocentral thread
http://tinyurl.com/qwkbg
specifically post number fourteen.

http://tinyurl.com/g8re8
the .prc is posted by DrWowe on Treocentral

27
by gadgetRN | Jul 4, 2006 10:56:10 AM

After getting my 700P, I began wanting a ringtone or two that were unique, fun, and distinct enough to get my attention. I started Googling for a way to do that. I read through the above article and it seemed like too much fiddling to just get a good quality sound file onto my device so I could use it for my ringtone (which by the way is the Pinky&Brain theme song with singing). Also the Ringo app sounds buggy and kludgey. I'm a Mac user and am more accustomed to things being simple, effective, and high quality. After initially researching this and reading this article I pondered on it some more and decided to look else where for a solution. While searching in Google I found a "Tutorial" in the Forums at EverythingTreo.com It uses Audacity an open-source freeware app for Apple/Windows/Linux. I was able to edit, convert, upload, and set the file as my ringtone in only a few minutes. It worked the first time, was easy, and was free. Below is the link to the tutorial.

http://www.everythingtreo.com/forum/treo-700p/treo-700p-ringtone-tutorial-6406.html

28
by arts | Jul 29, 2006 2:42:25 AM

Check out http://www.mytinyphone.com
They offer free ringtone and cell phone wallpaper maker.

29
by Henry H | Oct 14, 2006 8:51:59 AM

Nice article, I just got my 700wx yesterday and I assumed that they already had the function to download real voice ringers, etc...Even though they do you still had to do all of this other crap. But anyway, after reading this article and getting Ringo, I was on a ringtone making mission. I was up all night making like ringtones of my favorite songs. I got pretty damn good and fast, I was down to editing and fade in/out in like 1 minute flat(yes I timed myself, Im an OCD computer g33k,go figure!). Now I can be the envy of all my hardcore loving friends who wish they could have their favorite band as their ringtone. haha!

Cheers!

30
by nick | Nov 25, 2006 2:41:39 PM

i am tryin to make a song i am a dj butnim trying to get a olace wat will make it sing

31
by Daave | Nov 28, 2006 6:40:36 PM

I'm dying to get some ringtones on my 700p, but the only method that I've seen is to e-mail it to my device. Is there any other way to get my 700p to accept .Wav files as a ringtone w/o e-mailing it to my phone? If so, how? thanks!

32
by Vicky | Dec 5, 2006 10:51:26 AM

You can drag your mp3 files into your quick install function, then just hotsync them. They'll automatically go into the correct folder.

33
by Donny | Dec 9, 2006 12:47:37 PM

After using Quick Install (which puts the mp3 file on my expansion card) how do I get them into my ringtone list?

34
by Donny | Dec 9, 2006 1:36:01 PM

Quick Install won't install midi files on my 680 as it says no application on organizer supports them

35
by Servaas | Dec 27, 2006 5:30:37 AM

That seems like a lot of work for a simple task. I don't know about the 700, but both 650 and 680 accept wav files over bluetooth as ringtones. Converting mp3 files is easy using audacity (free, mac/windows/linux) and just send the wav file over BT to your treo. It's imported into ringer as ringtone automagically.

36
by my name | Dec 27, 2006 5:14:53 PM

how could the writer say that free midi zone is " Excellent" but they don't even support treo phones. am i missing something?

37
by Ken Sajdak | Dec 29, 2006 4:52:59 PM

Just tried this on a 650 with a .wav file.

The file plays through real player, shows up as a sound for ringtines, but when selected, dies not play as a ring tone.

Any ideas?

38
by evy | Jan 26, 2007 12:03:43 AM

i'm having the same issue as ken. I have a treo 650 and all files automatically play on real player? how can I change this???

39
by TMack | Feb 16, 2007 8:35:25 PM

First, thanks for the awesome article above on the 'switch' software, etc. I have used this to change my song format to .wav, cut the song the way I like, and save it on my laptop. HOWEVER, when I try to drag the .wav into my Quick Install (Treo 650), it will not allow it to enter the Treo 'harddrive', but will only allow it into the SD/memory card. How can I get it onto my Treo, as I do not have a phone plan that allows email.

40
by Minya | Feb 24, 2007 11:59:08 PM

So I read the statement on how to make a ringtone using wavepad, and I followed it to the t, I also emailed the coverted wav-to-mp3 file to my treo and it wont play?!?!? Any ideas?

41
by TreoQueen | Mar 20, 2007 10:53:41 PM

someone was able to find a way to change the Sprint Treo 650 and make it possible for me to record my own ringtones (btw, thanks for that link!) so my question is, is there anyone who knows how to make it so that i can make ringers personalized.. it may be impossible but i just had to ask in hope that i didn't have to buy the 700 in order to get that feature.

Thanks in advance!

42
by gadgetsage | Mar 27, 2007 4:11:44 PM

Those NCH apps pretend to be free, then after you've made it the default whatever handler, it refuses to do anything unless you pay exorbitant prices for each aspect of its functionality. Nice audio editor, but I'm not paying $100 bucks for it when audacity's still free.

43
by Stephane Brault | Apr 15, 2007 7:59:13 PM

You can also download lots of free midi files here : http://midi.homemusician.net

44
by Agbi | Jun 12, 2007 1:36:14 PM

Great Article. I've been trying to do this to make custom ringtones for my phone because I find that most of the ones that you can buy aren't really that good (plus, why buy them if you can do it free?).

Anyway, I had been using the simple-stupid method on my own, till I came across this page. Quick tip for 680 users. If you make your audio clip and convert to .amr format, and you e-mail it to yourself, when you save it the phone will save it under voice memmos. Then you can copy as a ringtone. That's the only way I got it to work.

I used the programs above to edit, and convert the songs. Plus, a 20 second clip was about 26kb when all was said and done. Maybe I selected a very low quality (I just used defaults). Anyway, sorry for this post being so long. Thanks again for the article

45
by Televator | Aug 5, 2007 10:25:21 AM

www.makeownringtone.com

I used this one a lot for my ringtone making, it is a great tool and easy to use.

46
by alex | Aug 12, 2007 7:48:13 PM

i just bought a treo 680 and i dont want to buy a ringtone...so if anyone knows a website i can go to get free ringtones holla at your bin laden...LOL...

47
by powerex | Oct 5, 2007 2:32:01 PM

If most of you have windows, you really dont need to install any additional programs to create ringtones in .wav format. Sound Recorder does an excellent job. Sound Recorder comes with windows. All you need to do is play the file you want as a ringtone in a seperate application like windows media player (again comes with windows, no additional programs required) and then use the sound recorder to record the portion of the ringtone. The downfall is that sound recorder only records up to 60 seconds which is more than enough for a ringtone. Sound Recorder has some options to allow you to change the quality and the output format. However, by default, Sound Recorder is set to record and save in .wav format so really you dont have to touch anything. Its pretty simple. You just need to remember where you save the file so you can easily find it when you need it. On another note, I think this only works if your sound card or system supports it. On the task bar, look for the speaker icon near the time, double click on this to bring up the Master Volume Controls, then select Options, then properties, then select the Recording radio button and it should show you a list of controls. If you see Stereo Mix or Mono Mix in there then your system can do this, Hit OK and Make sure you have one of them selected and you should have no problems.

48
by Bruce | Nov 4, 2007 5:03:22 AM

ok so i skimmed this article.. and i dont think i noticed the Treo 750. Does the .amr file work for the 750? or only the 650?

Is there another format for the 750 if .amr don't work? Trying not to use that ringo that i downloaded from my carrier.

49
by kevin | Nov 8, 2007 7:34:01 PM

i would like to know if you can run a powerpoint can get it thanks

50
by mel | Dec 7, 2007 1:52:04 PM

wav. doesn't work on treo 700p

The comments to this entry are closed.

 
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