Lock chimes that should not be. Brainrot, surreal meme noise, and just-a-bit-too-loud horror cuts — for the Tesla owner who treats Boombox as a personal joke.
A cursed chime is wrong on purpose — brainrot noise, a distorted meme, a horror cut that is a little too loud for a driveway. Reach for one when you want the people nearby to slowly turn and look.
Yes. Every file on TeslaLockSound is pre-encoded to Tesla's published Boombox spec — WAV, 44.1 kHz, 16-bit PCM, 1–5 seconds, volume-normalized, under 1 MB, named LockChime.wav. No conversion needed.
Download the WAV, drop it on a FAT32 or exFAT USB drive at Boombox/LockChime.wav, plug into a front data USB port, then enable in Toybox → Boombox → Lock Sound → USB. The full step-by-step guide is at /guide (with model-specific pages for Model 3, Y, S, X, and Cybertruck).
Every model from Sept 2019 onward (when Tesla started shipping the external Pedestrian Warning Speaker as standard). Use the per-model compatibility pages at /sounds/for/[model]/[year] to verify your exact car.