Output is relative to input. If your reciever is meant to achieve full rated power with 2 volts input (you can find this in the ownwer's manual, go get it , I'll wait)
the device you are using has to be capable of producing 2 volts output (go back and get that manual, too).
If it cannot do that the reciever will never make its full rated power, no matter where the LCD is set. If, on the other hand, the unit can produce 3 volts output (you know what to do now, don't you?)
your amp will be driven to full power before 0 dB is shown on your reciever's LCD. So 0 dB is relative to the input level of your sources and that is likely to vary from unit to unit among your sources. There is no real agreed upon output voltage for home audio components. (Look in the books, I'm not lying.)
What I am suggesting is you learn to recognize what a clipping, distorted amplifier sounds like. As a clue, the amplifier will reach a point where the volume no longer gets LOUDER as the numbers on the LCD go up. (Don't try this at home.) It will get compressed and a hard distorted sound will come into the output if you continue to increase the volume control. If you do not LOWER the volume immediately you will be replacing the tweeters in your speakers and possibly the output transistors, and associated parts, in your reciever. This is clipping and it is not healthy for small children and other living things.
Try this:
Go over to a friend's house and tell him you want to show him what you have learned here. Bring lots of alchohol and make sure he has inbibed luxuriantly before you show him how to blow up his system. You will both have learned a valuable lesson and you will have experienced severe amplifier clipping with the only cost to you being the alchohol.
Bottom line: Don't clip YOUR amplifier.