Tweaked max power on this video.
Frickin' PERFECT! More real than the real video! Seriously. This is truly a masterpiece!
And of course there's a reason why audio on the C-47 vids sound the way they do: the camera's mic. Often just a phone,with a tiny mic designed to capture 3000Hz voices in a noisy environment, so the frequency response is way narrower than the props and engine produce. And that's why the real one you posted earlier seemed to get quieter on takeoff--noise cancelling went to work.
Off topic a bit, but you might be amused:
If you watch
The Mummy movie you'll hear the sounds of one of our aircraft (a Travel Air biplane with Lycoming R-680 and a Hamilton Standard 2B20 prop).
The sound guys fastened a mic near the carb under the cowl, and another almost
in the exhaust. I kept telling them most of the sounds comes from the prop, and they kept giving me the "you do your job, let's us do ours" look.
Afterwards they let me listen to the raw recording (digital, of course). I was standing with my back to the hangar door while they fiddled to get it "rewound" to the pointed when we started the engine. Suddenly one of our idiot pilots cranked up the aircraft right there in the hangar! Scared the hell out me...until I realized I was listening to the recording made earlier out on the ramp. Astonishingly real.
Further off topic, but one of the things they asked me to do was to make the engine backfire and then quit. In the air. And, I just remembered, it was in the pattern at about 600' too, because the weather was IFR and we had to get a Special VFR clearance (1 mile and clear of clouds) between arriving flights to get the recording done. It was only a few weeks before the film was released on 7 May 1999, and they were desperate because what they had recorded months earlier wasn't good enough. (My log book shows we flew April 12th.)
As a glider instructor shutting down the engine wasn't a big deal, but the tower was not amused. I leaned the mixture out so the engine would pop and bang before I shut it down, and the sound guy in the front cockpit was happy. But airport security happened to be on the ramp and called the tower all excited because the biplane in the downwind had engine problems - prolonged backfiring before engine failure.
As it happened, the engine didn't want to restart on final, so I had to roll off the active with a stopped prop which attracted some attention, too.
Too Fun indeed!
Thank you, TuFun! Thank you!
P.S. The "Biplane Rides" sign we see during your south to north low pass at Orcas Island is on Rod 'Magic' Magnor's hangar. He flew A-7s in 'Nam, hung out with Richard Bach, and operated a Travel Air, same years as our "new" one (1929). Our "old" one (1927) was licensed the same day Lindbergh flew across the Atlantic, as a matter of fact.