Rahul said:
Ever since the DXOMark fiasco over their "score" of 70-200 IS II, I lost respect for them.
BTW, while I own the Canon 70-200mm IS II, it is their "score" of the 100mm macro L lens that really worries me.
In independent measures of MTF plots higher-end macro lenses almost invariable perform extremely well in lab. Yet, according to DXO Mark the Canon 100mm L macro allegedly has an acutance no better than the Canon 24-70mm L zoom lens. I would regard this as most improbable.
I am sure there are those reading this thread, and thinking that we're a bunch of Canon fanboys sour over the fact that our pet lens has been slighted. However, I also shoot on a Sony a7. I made the BIG mistake of being swayed by the stellar ratings given by DXO Mark to the new Sony 90mm macro G lens. It allegedly rivals the Zeiss Otus for sharpness. So I went and bought the Sony macro, and while it is a nice enough a lens, it is nowhere near as outlandishly spectacular as DXO Mark allege it is. Here is the proof:
http://www.lensrentals.com/blog/2015/10/sony-e-mount-lens-sharpness-bench-tests
The Lens Rental tests show that the new Sony macro G is just slightly behind on acutance compared to the Canon 100mm L macro, although both measure up well, as you'd expect of quality macro lenses. Yet according to DXO Mark we are lead to believe that the Sony is almost twice as sharp as the Canon, which, astonishingly for a macro lens, only rates as highly on acutance as a zoom lens.
I can assure you that when you shoot both the Canon 100mm L macro (which I also own) on a Sony a7II (with Metabones adapter) alongside the Sony 90mm macro G, they are equally as sharp, and neither is obviously better. What my eyes see is well reflected in the MTF plots published on Lens Rental.
So that means, irrespective of brand, whether DXO Mark rate something highly, mediocrely, or poorly, none of it seems to make even the slightest of sense. They seem to post what are little more than random numbers on their website without the slightest of explanation as to how they arrived at them.
It's like the end of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy where we are told that the meaning of life is some seemingly random number like "42". We are expected to credulously believe these absurd magic numbers that miraculously pop up on their website like "ex cathedra" pronouncements with little more explanation than "God said so".