Neutral said:
Look at this from the other angle.
DXO gives perceptial resolution of the system containing two components - lens and camera sensor.
This is very useful to see overal system performance and how well lens is suited for particular camera/sensor.
So on Nikon D800 this combination allows to get 75% of 36mpx sensor resolution (27/36=0.75) but on Canon 5DSR only 64% of 50mpx resolution (32/50=0.64).
So on 5DSR lens degrades overall resolution by 36% and on Nikon d800 only by 25%.
So clearly on D800 score for this lens should by higher than on 5DS.
In other words this lens is less optimal for Canon 5DS than for Nikon D800.
This logic of yours is completely wrong. Let's apply it...
Sigma 50/1.4A:
• Nikon D800E, 23 P-Mpix / 36 MP = 64%
• Canon 5DIII, 21 P-Mpix / 22 MP = 95%
• Clearly on the 5DIII the score should be much higher than the D800E, the lens is far less optimal for the D800E
• DxO Lens Score on D800E = 36, Score on 5DIII = 35
Zeiss 50/1.4 Otus
• Nikon D800E, 33 P-Mpix / 36 MP = 92%
• Canon 5DIII, 21 P-Mpix / 22 MP = 95%
• Clearly on the 5DIII the score should be slightly higher than the D800E, the lens is a bit less optimal for the D800E
• DxO Lens Score on D800E = 50, Score on 5DIII = 38
The same would be true of pretty much every 3rd party lens tested on the D800E and the 5DIII, by your flawed logic they should all score higher on the 5DIII - but they don't.
Neutral said:
There were number of discussions earlier regarding DXO lenses perceptial resolutions on different bodies and what I see that a lot of people are totally confused and do not undestand well what it is all about.
Unfortunately, it seems you should include yourself in that population of those people who are totally confused and do not understand well what it is all about.
What it is all about is that the DxO Score for lenses is based on performance when shooting at base ISO at 1/60 s in 150 lux – the light level of a dimly-lit warehouse. That means the three factors that primarily drive the Lens Score are lens transmission, sensor DR at base ISO, and sensor color depth at base ISO. That's why the nifty-50/1.8 scores higher than the 600/4 II on the same camera, and that's why the score for the Sigma 24-35/2 is higher on the D800E than on the 5DSR.
Good job swallowing DxO's BS hook, line and sinker. Alternatively, maybe you understand perfectly well how DxO's Lens Scores work, and your 'other angle' was an expression of bias rather than flawed logic.