testthewest said:Well, getting 36MPix out of a 36,3 MPix camera is outstanding. Getting 40MPix out of a 50MPix camera is merely great. So how could the combination of the Canon/Sigma ever score higher if it loses 20% of the pixels, while the Nikon/Sigma combo does barely lose any?
Stop talking rationally, we're talking about DXO.
In the past, lenses that outresolved the sensor sitting behind it (let's say 22 out of 22 P-MPix on a 5D3) were deemed 'disappointing' and 'sensor-limited' while the test result of the same lens on a 36 MP D800E got a 30-out-of-36 and was 'deemed brilliant' and 'class-leading'. To DXO, more is better when it came to resolution, and seemingly solely on the virtue of being the only 36 MP rig out there at the time(the original A7R was late to their testing party), Nikon topped all the overall score lists.
Now the findings don't make sense; the lower resolving combination breaks their overall scoring record while the higher resolving combination's score is inexplicably gouged. It seems like some very minor differences in transmission and vignetting are bossing the overall score larger than ever before.
It's not about right or wrong (or even your very fair) perspective. It's about DXO changing its overall scoring the moment Nikon no longer was class leading in resolution. Somehow despite all the sharpest lens tests, none of the current top 5 lenses at DXO are on the 5DS R, which is laughable given their prior body of work. Their prior 5 highest scoring lenses (prior to the 5DS R) were I believe their #1 - #5 highest resolving lenses. Now? No longer so.
And again, I don't need Canon to be 'top' or trust DXO's scoring at all in any way. I just want to see them have a method, publish it and stick to it -- or in absence of that, stick to their standard sub-metrics and abolish the overall score altogether. Otherwise, they remain a big fat biased piñata to swing at.
- A
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