I don't think he has.
No offense wicked, but I will go so far as to say you are incorrect here. A Bandpass enclosure cannot play deeper unless it is tuned deeper than a comparable ported enclosure. There is no way around it. It is dictated by physics.
You are correct in saying that a bandpass rolls off the high frequencies. A ported or sealed enclosure would require a crossover (as should any bandpass though it would not require as steep a slope). However, it does not make the system play deeper, it just makes it more efficient.
The ONLY advantage of a bandpass type enclosure is increased efficiency through out the pass band. They cannot play deeper unless tuned deeper. Basically, they play louder but at a cost of accuracy. That is it. Designing a bandpass enclosure capable of playing as low as a ported enclosure (say tuned to 18hz-20hz) would be a pain, not to mention about 2x the size of an equally tuned ported enclosure. The increase in output over a ported enclosure would probably only be about 1db-2db potentially more depending upon how narrow the pass band were designed.
What you are hearing when listening to a ported or sealed woofer next to a bandpass is the difference in loudness. When a system is playing 2db louder than another it will sound "deeper" because it is playing louder. The fact is, a ported or sealed enclosure will almost always deliver a smoother, flatter response curve from 20hz-80hz than a bandpass enclosure.
A bandpass can equal the flat smooth response (of a low tuned ported enclosure) but not without the hassle of an extremely large enclosure and tediousness of trying to get the response spot on.
IF this can be done correctly, a bandpass would simply yield higher efficiency
not deeper response. It would simply be a bit louder, in theory. The issue here is that bandpass enclosures also begin to lose their efficiency gains the wider their pass band becomes. So, that being said, a properly designed bandpass with response from 20hz-80hz would not yield much advantage in efficiency over a low tuned ported enclosure.
As you can see for the reasons stated above, much of the subwoofer community has abandoned the bandpass enclosure. Coupled with advances in woofer design and the size of the enclosures, bandpass systems are beginning to be obsolete. Sure, there will still be applications where it may be useful (concerts, sound reinforcement) but for the most part, they simply don't work well for the home theater/audio environment.