Create a bogus ringtone using the "Music Composer" in the "Tools menu (it doesn't have to be long). Save it as a name you will recognize (even the name of the ringtone you want to eventually use).
Download BitPim (www.bitpim.org) and find the melody you composed (it will have a .mid extension).
Go to the file on your computer (probably a .wav or .mp3) and change the name to *exactly* the filename of your melody (including the extension). Use BitPim to load your ringtone over the existing melody. Then when you want to make it your ringtone, chose the "My Melodies" folder and use the newly created ringtone.
“An engineer explained to us that hundreds of ear impressions were gathered in the name of research, and while each one obviously boasted its own unique shape and size, one single characteristic remained uniform across the board: the entrance into the ear canal is not a perfect circle, it's an oval.”
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Create a bogus ringtone using the "Music Composer" in the "Tools menu (it doesn't have to be long). Save it as a name you will recognize (even the name of the ringtone you want to eventually use).
Download BitPim (www.bitpim.org) and find the melody you composed (it will have a .mid extension).
Go to the file on your computer (probably a .wav or .mp3) and change the name to *exactly* the filename of your melody (including the extension). Use BitPim to load your ringtone over the existing melody. Then when you want to make it your ringtone, chose the "My Melodies" folder and use the newly created ringtone.