...Then proceeded to move the Cutoff knob (of the Steiner Filter) to Min/Max while using either "LP" or "HP. I could still hear sound through my headset (running through external mixer ProFX) at those extremes. The sound was much lower, yet, still there.
p.s. The lower notes come through stronger when using LP, and, the higher notes when using HP as expected. So, can hear sound when (per manual) I should not be.
The Steiner has a slope of 12dB/octave whereas the Ladder's slope is 24dB/octave. I.e. neither are brickwall filters, and with the Steiner's relative shallower slope, it will be heard several octaves away from the Ladder. This is what the numbers look like:
- for the Ladder, 1, 2, 3 and 4 octaves away from the center frequency will give attenuation of 24dB, 48dB, 72dB and 96dB.
- for the Steiner, 1, 2, 3 and 4 octaves away from the center frequency will give attenuation of 12dB, 24dB, 36dB and 48dB.
That is quite a difference and should explain why the ladder sound goes away (-96dB, below the noise floor) already after 4 octaves, while the Steiner is til audible (-48dB, high above the noise floor) after 4 octaves. I just did a listening test, and it all checks out here :-)