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Some marketing also comes into play with the published specs. For example, with the DPA 4021, the official specs are 40Hz-20kHz, +/- 2dB. now, the DPA's have great bass response, and almost certainly pickup sounds down to 20Hz (or below?). But DPA chooses to market it's microphones as having a very flat and accurate frequency response. So it was more important to them to stop the published specs at 40 Hz and stay within +/- 2dB, then to publish a spec that looked like 20Hz-20kHz +/- 10dB (or whatever the actual value is at 20 Hz, I don't really know it).
conversely, the official specs for Neumann km140's are 20Hz-20kHz, without stating how much the frequency response varies within that range. however, if you look at the frequency response graph, it looks like the response is -12dB at 20Hz. So Neumann made marketing decision that it was more important to state a 20Hz-20kHz frequency range, but then downplayed the fact that the mics are at -12dB at 20Hz.
Now, the beyerdynamic CK930 mics, like the DPA's, have an official spec of 40Hz-20kHz. if you look at the frequency response graph, it looks like the CK930's are around -5dB at 40Hz, which is about where the Neumann km140's are at 40Hz as well. If I had to guess, from looking at the graph (and from my own experience with the mics), I would say that the CK930's are in the -10 to -15 dB range at 20 Hz. But I certainly don't have the appropriate equipment needed to test the mics myself. Though I would be very surprised if the response of the mics down at 20Hz, even though it's attenuated by a good deal, is less than the self-noise of the mic itself. Therefore, I think it's a safe assumption that you're picking up actual, useful sound information down in the 20Hz-40Hz range.
- Jason