It seams like it.
Sure. but so can 5$ smoke alarm with a 9V battery.
If you listen to actual "normal music" with dynamic and most power in the low frequency, it can’t.
107dB sounds like a lot but it is not. but is not necessarily a lot.
Short burst, and low frequency's are not perceived as Loud this why every normal SPL meter is integrating over some time constant and (optionally) waiting the signal.
So if you don’t clip the amplifier and use it to listen to some what normal music the RMS dB(A) SPL will (waht a SPL meter would show you)
will always be WAY lower then 107dB
And this dB(A) RMS values a SPL meter would read is what NIST and OSHA base there recommend exposure limits on
So i find it more "phrased it in a way that can confuse others." to say "107dB" if this no way comparable to the RMS dB(A) numbers we normally uses when we talk about volume.
At least as long as used "with normal music" and not clipping... but i thougt this can be assumed.
For example "RTJ-yankee and the brave (ep. 4)" (loud and compressed pop song) is in dB(A) rms only -15.4dB below its peak.
So based on the 107dB number this would reult in
91.6dB(A) RMS you can listen to this particular song without clipping.
Well base on my calculation with the particular example trace.
You can listen to music at max. at level that is considers "Save enough" for ~2-8h of exposure.