Horn

Owner reviews for horn

Manufacturers
OEM Chevrolet Horn
DrRazmataz
  • Loudness:
Rating 5.0

people have suggested nabbing a stock horn from a mid 2000's Chevy Trailblazer or one of its contemporaries, as it's incredibly loud, and small enough to be wired to a bike. And cheap!

Pros: incredibly loud, small, cheap
Vehicle: Chevrolet TrailBlazer
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FIAMM Horn

I swapped mine with a “FIAMM 72112 Freeway Blaster LOW Note Horn” just because I didn’t care for the stock tone. Cost was under $20 and took 5 minutes

Pros: new tone, easy to install
Vehicle: Toyota Matrix
Part number: 72112
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OEM Mazda Horn
Alert-Meringue2291
  • Loudness:
  • Tone:
Rating 5.0

My ‘94’s horn died several years ago. I found one from an RX7 as a replacement and it sounds much better/louder.

Pros: much better sound, louder
Vehicle: Mazda
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Hella Horn
ASE-84
  • Loudness:
  • Tone:
Rating 5.0

Yes ... the stock horn is an absolute joke. People actually laugh thinking the sound is coming from a Moped. A single Hella SuperTone Horn fits perfectly ... can use original mounting location. There is NO ROOM for anything much larger.

Pros: fits perfectly, easy install
Cons: no room for larger horns
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FIAMM Horn
bikergeekx
  • Loudness:
Rating 5.0

Use the included relay to power them, the stock wires won't cut it. Use the stock connection to power the relay. You won't regret it. I've put these on every bike I've owned since 1984.

Pros: long-term satisfaction, loud sound
Vehicle: Suzuki
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OEM Volkswagen Horn

My low tone horn (the high-mounted one) faild and was recently replaced by the dealer. The high note alone sounds weird!

Cons: high note sounds weird
Vehicle: Volkswagen Phaeton
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