How loud are you typically listening?


Typically 75 to 80dB.  Really loud is 90dB and I'm never over, and I mean never, 95dB.  I'm using a professional SPL meter, C weighted, slow response.  Just curious.
128x128onhwy61
I crank! I'm 65 still listening to Punk and hard rock! My neighbors complain and we have acres between our houses! One night a friend who is a musician couldn't believe how good it sounded! He said I think someone is knocking on the door? I opened the door and my neighbor was telling me my music was 2 loud/I told him I couldn't hear him and shut the door! The cops were the next knock! Ha Ha! My set-u JBL Studio masters I bought new in the 70's/Tigris tube amp and a Primaluna Tube Cd player with a tube clock! God rid of my krell and went back to my old gear! Happy Camper!
ibmjunkman -
71 dB for a burp is amateurish. 
Probably only God knows now what John Belushi could produce!
(Modesty prevents me from making my numbers public).

I weighed in on this discussion in an earlier post - 
"How do I establish a reference level?"
So are most of you measuring C weighted or A weighted. I notice Db-a is the default on the app I am using. When I switch it to C there is a 12-15 difference in the decibels with C being higher. What would be the standard way to measure? If it’s C then damn I’m listening a lot higher than I thought! 
I typically use C scale, which is a flatter measurement. The A scale cuts both low and high frequencies to simulate the human ear's sensitivity at low to moderate levels.  The A reading is only flat from about 500 Hz to 6 KHz. As such, the A scale will appear to register lower than the C scale. Which one is more commonly used depends on the application.
The volume difference really is massive between the 2. A weighted 90 db is freaking LOUD. Measured C rated not so much. 
Is one considered a standard way to measure in a home stereo application?