Larsskv said:
Neutral said:
Orangutan said:
privatebydesign said:
DXO is entirely flawed and without transparency the 'results', ratings, and numbers are entirely irrelevant.
I personally do not see any issues with the results of their measurements (not scores) looking at their data and doing my own tests. One interesting thing though that using best canon glass on my Sony a7rII I get perceptially better results than DXO publish for Canon 5DSR.
Consider what you are writing here. You do not see any issues, but you get better "perceptually better results" with the A7RII than the 5DSR. Considering that extra resolution, that seems a little weird, don´t you think?
Did you compare apples to apples?
Did you take your test picture in a room with 150 lux, at 1/60 sec, at base ISO and pushed the file to correct lighting when you took your comparison picture? No? Because that is what DXO seems to do. I get "perceptually better results" with all my f/4 lenses, than what is reported by DXO. Why? Because I make a correct exposure in a sufficient amount of light, when I am shooting, and therefore DXO is irrelevant for my type of shooting, which I guess is quite common - at least with Canon shooters.. DXO is very misleading, and it´s hard to know when they don´t let you know how they rate their scores.
(Edit: I don´t see why my text is quoted here...)
[
I agree that using this combination of ISO, shuter speed and luminance creates a bit difficult overall setup and gives latest better tech sensors some advantage.
With higher luminance results could be better.
And this applies in particular to the a7rII sensor. As I mentioned I can push sharpness very agressively using 0.5 radius without seeing any side effects. As results on final processed image I can see that my EF24-70 f/2.8L IS USM II resolve to every single pixel on a7rII. The same for the latest 70-200 and 100-400 .
So better visual results is contribution of both the lens quality and sensor quality and indicator of this combo performace.
On the other hand if all measurements are done using the same conditions then they could be compared on the same body without any problems/issues . For comparison it important that all done exactly the same with the same conditions
If I want to compare lenses on the same body this is all OK.
As for luminance conditions - this could be considered as some negative shift/bias that could be taken into account if needed.
For me I use DXO data to see what could be the best performance lens for particular body so I do not have any problems with their measurements.