Unfortunately (or fortunately, depending on how you want to look at it), I am well past the point of drunken parties. My comment about inadvertently goosing the volume was more of a recognition that my early teenage daughter likely will be using the system as well, and although she's a pretty responsible kid who doesn't willfully test a lot of boundaries, she can be a bit careless/inattentive at times. I can just give her a safe volume cap that should cover me on that concern.
Temporarily, I am running the speakers off of a friend's older Marantz 7.1 AVR that I think outputs at either 50 or 60Wpc, so I should be fine (my AVR the I previously used with in-walls wouldn't allow bi-amping of speakers below 8 ohms using the surround backs and I'm in the process of trying to put together a new system, whether an AVR alone or with separate amp(s) for the front channels or a pre/pro and amplifiers to drive everything) now that I have the second pair of Snells to match the first).
To Verdinut's point about the speakers specs likely expressing capability to handle a maximum instantaneous peak input power of 150 watts, how dependent is that on the amplifier driving the speakers versus other factors (type of music being listened to, the source of the audio signal, etc.)? Stated a little differently, if the system is playing something that sounds un-distorted at a given volume over time (i.e., what sounds to be a reasonable volume) but has a momentarily loud passage that is atypical from the mix of the rest of the track, does the risk of damage due to exceeding the speakers' maximum instantaneous peak input power increase dramatically with a 300 Wpc amplifier relative to a 100 Wpc amplifier, or as a practical matter am I just looking at it incorrectly or posing a hypothetical that's unlikely to occur?