I just did a bit of testing of the H2e vs the H2N to see how well the H2e with its kind-of 32 bit float functionality compares with the H2n. I recorded a short passage of rock music into the H2N line input, with the output from the amp adjusted so that the level on the H2N meters was not quite over the top. The H2N input level was set to zero (which does still allow a tiny bit of sound through). Then I did the same with the H2e, being careful to input the same level from the amp (simple enough, I just made sure the volume knob wasn't moved). The H2e has no gain adjustment.
The H2N replay and waveform display was fine. The piece of music has one quite distinct maximum peak and the waveform at that point was rounded not flat.
The H2e replay sounded dire at first and the displayed waveform was just a solid lump! However, normalising it brought it back to a recognisable waveform display, but - it was still flattened along the top, and the peaks were flat not rounded.
The moral of that is that if you want to record from an amp under circumstances where it could be really loud, the H2N seems to be the better option to avoid clipping, if you set its gain to zero. The signal that the H2N coped with caused the H2e clipping light to flash all the time, showing the input was saturated even before it got to the single AD converter.
I then tried recording a test tone into the mics of each device, using the H2N first, and adjusting the level of the tone so that the H2N clip light did not quite come on. This time the result was better insofar as the H2e recording, though initially being about 17dB over the top in the editor, was fine when normalised, with rounded peaks. The test was slightly crude but it gave me reasonable confidence that mic recordings with the H2e would not be clipped before the H2N clipped.
Note that the mic configuration of the two devices is somewhat different but I'm quite confident that the test was valid.
[Edited to add that I tried the tone test into the mics of the M2 device at an even higher level - sorry neighbours - and that was fine, but it is rated as capable of handling 135dB at the mic. I then cranked it to stupid level which did lead to a slightly mis-shaped waveform (but not clipped) but frankly that could have been the speaker not coping, as I saw it kind of jump when I started playback. Same as the lady across the road jumped too...]