Picked up a pair of these but haven’t yet used them. Very similar specifications to the 4060, which should work well for some of the configurations I’m looking forward to trying. These are designed as hanging choir microphones and are likely to be better suited to far-field recording than most of their directional miniature microphones designed for close-mic'ing vocals and instruments, both in frequency response and in sensitivity.
Some specifications and graphs
from the DPA website: DPA 4098H
Pressure gradient supercardioid pre-polarized condenser Frequency range: 20 Hz to 20 kHz, ± 2 dB 80 Hz to 15 kHz @ 20 cm (7.9 in) distance: with 3 dB diffuse field boost at 8 to 15 kHz
Sensitivity, nominal ± 3 dB at 1 kHz: 20 mV/Pa; -34 dB re. 1 V/Pa
Equivalent noise level, A-weighted: Typ. 23 dB(A) re. 20 μPa (max. 26 dB(A))
Equivalent noise level, ITU-R BS.468-4: Typ. 35 dB (max. 38 dB)
S/N ratio (A-weighted), re. 1 kHz at 1 Pa (94 dB SPL): 71 dB(A)
Total harmonic distortion (THD): <1 % up to 123 dB SPL peak; <1 % up to 120 dB SPL RMS sine
Dynamic range: Typ. 100 dB
Max. SPL, peak before clipping: 134 dB
Output impedance: From Microdot: 30 to 40 ohm; from DAD6001: 100 ohm
Cable drive capability: Up to 300 m (984 ft) with DAD6001 XLR adapter
Common mode rejection ratio (CMRR): > 60 dB from 50 Hz to 15 kHz with DAD6001 XLR adapter
Power supply (for full performance): Min. 5 V – max. 50 V through DPA adapter; with DAD6001: 48 V phantom power ±4 V
Current consumption: 1.5 mA. 3.5 mA with DAD6001 XLR adapter
Connector: MicroDot; 3 pin XLR-M from DAD6001 XLR adapter
Microphone diameter: 10 mm (0.39 in)
Capsule diameter: 5.4 mm (0.2 in)
Microphone length: 154 mm (6.1 in)
Gooseneck length: 95 mm (3.7 in)
Polarity: Positively increasing sound pressure produces positive going voltage at MicroDot pin (and pin 2 on DAD6001 XLR adapter)
Some close-up photos I took the other day follow. The gold rectangular internal capsule appears to be identical to the 406x, only with a short interference tube made from a very dense mesh replacing the short/long omni grids, and two small vents at the back of the capsule housing. The microdot termination, powering requirements, self-noise, sensitivity, max SPL, etc are all the same as the 4060.
Photos-