I believe that few amplifiers intentionally limit frequency response anywhere near the audible range. A rule of thumb I heard years ago was that any high-pass filter had to be at least 2 octaves below the lowest point one wants to be audible. If one uses 20Hz for that lowest point, than the HIGHEST-frequency filter should be no higher than 5Hz. I think that most filter points, and these filters, generally, are 'single-order' ( = 6dB per octave) filters composed of a capacitor in series with the signal, loaded with a resistor to ground, are far below 5 Hz. I've calculated the filter points of the 2 original coupling caps in my Audio Refinements Pre 5 preamp at 0.07Hz and 0.3Hz.
Gs5556 is correct in that the FR specs of an amp have a tolerance of so many deciBels. That's usually quite small at the extremes of the audio band...say one-half dB or less. The -3dB point (the accepted definition of 'filter point') would be WAY below that. So virtually any amp will pass frequencies WAY below its published specs, and the lower the frequency goes, the less energy it has.
Ar_t: "...those numbers are 3 dB down, and one octave away would be 6 dB down. Two octaves would be 12 dB down." Not quite. A single-order filter reduces energy by 6dB per octave. So the energy at the filter point is -3dB or half power. One octave further down, the energy is NINE dB down (nine equaling 3 plus 6), and one more octave down, the energy is 15dB down, and so on.
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