

It is the advanced version of the T-Force Alpha TS. (You arrive at -11.7 by putting 0.26 into a calculator, hitting the Log 10 button, and multiplying by 20.Alpha Plus is a hybrid trance-gate synth.

then you know, at that point, the gain will be reduced by roughly 11.7 dB FS. So, in your automation track, if you set an automation point and it shows 26% as it does in the screenshot below: They also relate to a reduction or boost in gain. The percentages above relate to dB FS on any meter in any DAW, at any bit depth. Or take the dB FS, divide by twenty, and raise ten to the power of the quotient to get the percentage. Take the base 10 logarithm of the percentage and multiply by twenty to get dB FS. You can calculate any specific value for yourself. It may be easier to think of the relationship visually: The volume is nearly halved every -6 dB FS. Notice that for the first few integer dB FS, the percentages correspond pretty closely (0 = 100%, -1 ≈ 90%, -2 ≈ 80%, -3 ≈ 70%). Regardless, if you're taking on the role of a recording engineer, it is a good idea to keep some notion of dB FS / percentage conversions in your head, regardless of the DAW you're using. (Alternate Meter Scale looked promising, but that's something else.)

I've never used FL Studio, but I did look through the program preference documentation and couldn't find anything.
