I hate to stir this pot after it seems settled, but I just did a short experiment:
Church CA-11 microphones into the PR-2 (5V PIP), placed in front of a speaker. I played the intro to the song Aqualung by Jethro Tull at 95 dB (C weighted on REW with a calibrated mic)
So - it's loud, but not really quite up to concert level, which I've read is about 100 dB or so.
Recorded on the Deity in stereo, 24 bit, with the recording levels set at 0 dB, 15 dB, 24 dB, and 36 dB.
Sucked them into Audacity 3.7.1 and used Effect > Amplify to normalize each file.
Audacity added 34 dB to the 0 dB recording, 19.7 dB to the 15 dB recording, 10.6 dB to the 24 dB recording, and 0 dB to the 36 dB recording (this last one had clipped in two spots)
I then aligned the tracks and looped a "silent" section of the music near the start of the song. (the Aqualung song (from the "Special Edition" album) was played from Spotify on my phone (Galaxy S10e) and cast to a Chromecast Audio attached to my receiver)
Are you still with me?
The silent section of the track recorded at 0 dB sounded like shit. Like a bad cassette recording.
The track recorded at 15 dB was also noisy, but much quieter.
The tracks recorded at 24 dB and 36 dB were quieter still and sounded identical to each other with only a very slight amount of hiss. I think this hiss represents the sum of all the residual noise in the entire signal chain.
It is not clear to me where the noise in the 0 dB and 15 dB recordings is coming from. It's either inherent the Deity file, or Audacity adds it when boosting the volume.
TL:DR - For best results, please adjust the recording levels on the Deity PR-2 like you would on any other recorder.