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Also remember, to have the best dynamics (and S/N ratio), try to watch the meters (if available) from the recording program. If you take Sound Forge, Wavelab, Samplitude, Cooledit (and the likes) this isn't a problem, they are designed for precise monitoring (but progs like Total recorder... Wavelab having the most precise recording meters of them all.
You should try to be as close to 0 dB as possible, without ever reaching it (try to have your loudest peak at -0.1 dB if possible). As the dBFS (Full Scale, this is the digital db scale) is different from analog db scales (there you can periodically go over 0). Going over 0 dB means clipping. Clipping is bad.
If you do that, the level of your recording will be the best. The loudest signals will be as loud as possible without clipping, and you don't need to amplify/normalize the recording (amplifying the signal will amplify the noise also, remember).
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