I agree with gladmo but will try to answer directly. 60hz grabs the kick drum impact and is as high as you need to go with good speakers imo. At 80hz you are clearly into the bsss guitar range and it can get hard to match tone even with a highpass it sounds like a sub/sat combo to me. At 60hz you get bass slam but could lose a touch of texture at 40-50hz if you have VERY capable speakers
But if you listen to just the subs with no speakers right around 35hz it is just tones or at least very slow cycles and it is just tones more or less. At 35 you are below an electric bass guitar. 35hz is what shakes the room for home theater.
I have had subs in 3 systems while electronics and speakers changed a few times the subs always stayed. rough speaker specs and casual measurements in my room confirmed the specs more or less (large room with minimal nodes). It is different for each system room.
thiel 2.4=flat to 32hz, used a 60hz highpass, thiels have great low bass but it is tuned too light for my tastes.
revel 228be=flat to 45hz? used a 60hz highpass, Revel has no low bass, totally mixing in action… in bad need of subs
JBl 4367=flat to 40hz, use a 40hz highpass. Amazing bass texture from these JBLs and they outperform the subs from 40hz up with more texture and tone but they drop lock a rock at 40hz.