@Seek, that’s the closest, if you ask me. And then ching for the carriage return bell, yes?
The sound of typing on an old standard Royal was a more basic sound in my childhood than radio or TV or washing machine. Even into the 1980s the distinctive tapping of typewriter keys was still everywhere in my life.
Kids, the carriage, which includes the long cylindrical black platen that the paper goes around, actually moves as you type. You get to the end of a line and you hear a bell that tells you it’s time to end the line and move down. Otherwise you will hit a hard margin setting that keeps you from going off the edge of the page (unless you hit MAR REL, and then you’re on your own). You’re supposed to be typing without looking at the keyboard or the page, so you need this margin warning. When you hear it, you pull the carriage return lever and the page advances to the start of a new line.
But I’m still guessing that the OP isn’t asking about an actual typewriter. I suggest that the OP is a student outside the U.S. who has a school assignment to come up with a phrase comparing something very familiar—the sound of “typing” on an electronic keyboard—to something else. She(?) probably had no intention of triggering this nostalgia rip in the geriatric ward.