the other thing you have to consider is how the frequency range is qualified with regard to tolerances. In the case of DPA, the specs actually state 40Hz - 20 kHz +/- 2dB. But the microphone frequency response doesn't just stop at 40Hz, DPA is implying that below 40Hz, the frequency response might be outside the +/- 2dB range. As the actual frequency plots show, the mics do have a great bass response (which we all know from listening to these mics as well), but below 40Hz, the response might be at -3dB or -4dB (or more or less), and DPA chooses to not highlight the portions of the frequency response outside the +/-2dB tolerance. Ultimately, that's probably a marketing decision. DPA likes to market its microphones as having a very flat frequency response, so they'll only publish the 40Hz-20kHz portion of range that falls within +/-2dB. The other marketing option is to publish a frequency range, but leave off the tolerances. For example, the official specs for the Neumann km140 say 20 Hz - 20 kHz, but they don't say what the tolerances are. If you look at that km140 frequency response graph, 20Hz is down at -11 or -12 dB. But for Neumann, it was more important to market their mics as "20Hz - 20 kHz" rather than market their mics as having a super flat frequency response across the whole range.