fredmiranda.com
Login

Moderated by: Fred Miranda
  New fredmiranda.com Mobile Site
  New Feature: SMS Notification alert
  New Feature: Buy & Sell Watchlist
  

FM Forums | Canon Forum | Join Upload & Sell

       2       end
  

Archive 2012 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...

  
 
Invertalon
Offline
• • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #1 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


You look at the lens ratings?

Something look a bit off here? (Some key-players highlighted...)



So if the lens resolution numbers can be so wrong... How can you look at their camera reviews with any more faith? If anything, lens resolution should be easier to test then an imaging sensor.

Just trying to make people realize that their testing is not "truth" in the real world. Seriously, these quantified results are hogwash, and that is put lightly. You think the camera sensor results are any better?



Apr 19, 2012 at 11:39 PM
skibum5
Offline
• • • • • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #2 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


Because the lens tests may be done by different people and they are much trickier to do well and you can be bad at one thing and good at another. And lenses differ more (although 7D sensors did differ quite a bit copy to copy as per vertical gain banding). The TINIEST focusing error can totally alter results. Even using 10x liveview I found you really need at least six tries and sometimes more for reach sample to start getting a reliable results. That takes forever, they may only do best of one or two or three for all we know. It also depends how far the target is. Maybe they test near MFD. SOme great lenses go bad there. Maybe they refocus for edges maybe they don't so field curvature can play a part too. Etc.

And particularly because, unlike their lens tests, their sensor tests match so well to what so many other people have measured. I mean I got like to the 1/10th of a stop same ISO100 DR numbers they did for 5D2 and 5D3.


Edited on Apr 20, 2012 at 12:02 AM · View previous versions



Apr 19, 2012 at 11:42 PM
cameron12x
Offline
• • • •
Upload & Sell: On
p.1 #3 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


I've always considered my 70-200mm f/4L IS to be one of my favorite and sharpest lenses.

Missing from the list is the 400mm f/5.6L. How did it fare?

The 24-105mm f/4L seems a bit overrated in this list.



Apr 19, 2012 at 11:53 PM
thedigitalbean
Offline
• • • • •
Upload & Sell: On
p.1 #4 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


Cameras don't have as much body-to-body variation as lenses do (they still have some which might be surprise to some).


Apr 19, 2012 at 11:56 PM
thw2
Offline
• • • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #5 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


There are many things that DXOMark gets wrong (e.g., they play down differences in high ISO performance while any tiny difference in low ISO performance is severely heightened, they have their own definition of ISO that is useful for sensor comparison but has no relevance in real world usage etc etc), but they do get some things right. In this regard, they are heavily biased. IMO, to compare sensors, the best test is to take 2 cameras of interest, shoot them side-by-side under controlled conditions and compare. To me, that is real world usage.

Photozone often complains about de-centered lenses and show how they seriously affect measurements. Does DXOMark even know what de-centering in lenses mean?



Apr 20, 2012 at 12:51 AM
dolina
Offline
• • • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #6 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


I look at DXOMark as a good talking point but at the end of the day will it determine your switching to a different system, will DXOMark magically increase your gear budget and what about unique focal lengths that have no direct equivalents?


Apr 20, 2012 at 12:55 AM
John Shultz
Offline
• •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #7 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


Those lens results are so far off the mark it makes my head spin. Any defense of the 300f2.8 II being bettered by a 24-105 automatically makes me think the rest of their data is out the door.

I don't even care if these data are truly representative of performance at optimum aperture (which I doubt), the conclusion is so grossly wrong in the real world as to be useless.



Apr 20, 2012 at 01:46 AM
surf monkey
Offline
• • • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #8 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


I think the consensus on FM is that the sensor tests seems much closer to real world experience and the lens tests are no where close. If you look at the references to DXOmark on FM it will always be in regards to sensors.


Apr 20, 2012 at 02:46 AM
kewlcanon
Offline
• • • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #9 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


It's the best thing since sliced bread .


Apr 20, 2012 at 02:54 AM
altenae1234
Offline

Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #10 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


70-200 version II rates lower then 70-200 version I.

Think about this.
They know and we all know this is not true.
DXO guys also rate every Nikon counterpart lens higher than Canon.

In real life the 70-200 II is one of the best zoom lenses in the world.

But DXO has nothing to do with real live.
Number numbers.

What we see with our eyes doesn't matter anymore.
Number numbers numbers and numbers. This is a bad thing.

We all trust ONE company for all there numbers !!!!!!

The company that rates the 70-200 F4 IS and 70-200 F2.8 IS II not that good !!!!!!!!!!!!

While these lenses are tested superb everywhere.

Take the camera , take pictures, see yourself and forget about this commercial company that sales software.




Apr 20, 2012 at 03:12 AM
cameron12x
Offline
• • • •
Upload & Sell: On
p.1 #11 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


John Shultz wrote:
Those lens results are so far off the mark it makes my head spin. Any defense of the 300f2.8 II being bettered by a 24-105 automatically makes me think the rest of their data is out the door.

I don't even care if these data are truly representative of performance at optimum aperture (which I doubt), the conclusion is so grossly wrong in the real world as to be useless.


+1000.

Any company which rates the 24-105 f/4L as optically superior to the 300mm f/2.8L is absolutely right!

The IQ at 24mm for the 300mm prime lens is abysmal...

Seriously, they have lost ALL credibility with me if they come to THOSE types of conclusions!



Apr 20, 2012 at 06:50 AM
Jasmin Robert
Offline

Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #12 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


DXO has only one (BIG) problem : their completely ridiculous rating system for lenses AND sensor.

They may make some good individual tests that can be taken seriously if viewed individually, but anyone believing that a d5100 as 1 point more than a 5d mkII and ranked higher than a medium format camera is completly rejecting 100 years of physics research regarding photon noise (which is the predominant noise in an image may I reming you). I mean a MF collects more than 5 times more photons than an aps-c, so unless the d5100 has a QE of 50% vs 10% for the ME

Their rating system is just badly conceived and the problem is that this is the No1 criteria they advertised.



Apr 20, 2012 at 07:29 AM
gdanmitchell
Offline
• • • • • • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #13 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


Invertalon wrote:
You look at the lens ratings?

Something look a bit off here? (Some key-players highlighted...)

http://i258.photobucket.com/albums/hh280/invertalon/DXOLens.jpg

So if the lens resolution numbers can be so wrong... How can you look at their camera reviews with any more faith? If anything, lens resolution should be easier to test then an imaging sensor.

Just trying to make people realize that their testing is not "truth" in the real world. Seriously, these quantified results are hogwash, and that is put lightly. You think the camera sensor results are any better?


So you know I'm not just whimpering because some Canon gear ended up with a lower rating than some Nikon gear, I've been saying for quite a while that you really have to look closely at the basis for the DXO "ratings." A lot of people glom onto the fact that some thing gets a "higher number" than some other thing and therefore "ranks higher" and presume that, because numbers are involved, that this must be evidence-based and incontrovertible and unarguable.

Not quite.

For a long time - in cases where Canon stuff ranks high and in cases where it ranks low and in cases having nothing to do with Canon - it is has been apparent that whatever objective stuff these values represent, they has very little if anything to connect them to actual photographic results.

Again, I have no ax to grind relative to brand or model of camera. As I've been pointing our recently, there are multiple brands making multiple models for really great gear right now and it is hard to go wrong if you make a need-appropriate choice from among them, probably continuing to use whatever brand you currently use.

Take care,

Dan



Apr 20, 2012 at 07:35 AM
Scott Stoness
Offline
• • • • • •
Upload & Sell: On
p.1 #14 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


skibum5 wrote:
Because the lens tests may be done by different people and they are much trickier to do well and you can be bad at one thing and good at another. And lenses differ more (although 7D sensors did differ quite a bit copy to copy as per vertical gain banding). The TINIEST focusing error can totally alter results. Even using 10x liveview I found you really need at least six tries and sometimes more for reach sample to start getting a reliable results. That takes forever, they may only do best of one or two or three for all we
...Show more

Yes - the larger the magnifcation the tougher the testing because of the 1/mm shake issue and even more importantly - between the tolerance of the lens mount and the tolerance of the camera mount, the lens has to be micro-adjusted, to do a fair test. And keep in mind that 24-105 vs 70-200, is comparing the sharpest spot on each lens. And further, you can't test a lens without a camera body, so comparing Nikon lens to Canon lens, you have to take the best vs best and if the best canon is better than the best Nikon, the Nikon lens will be underrated. Further the best lens on a ff is not the best on a crop, so you have to take this into account.

So comparing 24-105 to 70-200 - 70-200 would be more effected by micro misalignments, lens mount misalignments.

However, in defense of Dxomark, they are testing where other raters are just providing subjective remarks. I find their data useful. But I verify visuall with thedigitalpicture iso charts.





Apr 20, 2012 at 08:12 AM
loosh
Offline
• • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #15 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


For the cameras I've owned, their rating system seems to be spot on. As others have stated, it's a starting point for comparison, nothing more. The only people who actually take them seriously are people who want something to talk about on message boards.


Apr 20, 2012 at 08:22 AM
Arun Gupta
Offline
• •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #16 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


skibum5 wrote:
Because the lens tests may be done by different people and they are much trickier to do well and you can be bad at one thing and good at another. And lenses differ more (although 7D sensors did differ quite a bit copy to copy as per vertical gain banding). The TINIEST focusing error can totally alter results. Even using 10x liveview I found you really need at least six tries and sometimes more for reach sample to start getting a reliable results. That takes forever, they may only do best of one or two or three for all we
...Show more

RAW images don't come out of nowhere without lenses, unless they are lens-cap-on tests.

In particular, the DXOMark sensor tests seem to require focusing on various color targets. Won't lack of accurate focus affect the results? E.g., if a target is out of focus, its image on the camera sensor will be smeared, won't that affect the mean and standard deviation that is computed of values in the RAW file?



Apr 20, 2012 at 08:51 AM
ausemmao
Offline
• •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #17 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


Arun Gupta wrote:
RAW images don't come out of nowhere without lenses, unless they are lens-cap-on tests.

In particular, the DXOMark sensor tests seem to require focusing on various color targets. Won't lack of accurate focus affect the results? E.g., if a target is out of focus, its image on the camera sensor will be smeared, won't that affect the mean and standard deviation that is computed of values in the RAW file?


You would need to be using a catastrophically bad lens for it to start affecting mean and SD values for colour patches, unless the patches were miniscule.



Apr 20, 2012 at 09:05 AM
WebDog
Offline
• • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #18 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


Not sure how to decode the list but seeing that the 75-300 (sic) gets better/higher numbers than the new 300/2,8IS II....

Sure, one of the worst cheapest lenses ranks higher than the new 300 prime??

What date was this done? 1st of april




Apr 20, 2012 at 09:22 AM
Arun Gupta
Offline
• •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #19 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


Correct or wrong
1. The Red, Green, Blue primaries on the camera sensor don't correspond to the R,G,B primaries of the sRGB color space. Or the R,G,B primaries of the Adobe RGB color space.

2. The transformation from camera sensor primaries to sRGB primaries introduces some noise (I'm unclear as to the mechanism, perhaps primarily from having to subtract quantities in transformation).

3. The transformation from camera RGB to Adobe RGB is a different transformation than for camera RGB to sRGB.

4. Nevertheless, the noise introduced by either transformation is pretty much the same. So the color space in which one does measurements does not affect color sensitivity measurements.



Apr 20, 2012 at 01:05 PM
bobbytan
Offline
• • • • • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #20 · Why do people put so much trust into DXOMark's ratings when...


Seriously ... is the 50/1.4 that much better than the 300/2.8L II? Gee, I gotta get myself one of those ... not!


Apr 20, 2012 at 01:28 PM
       2       end




FM Forums | Canon Forum | Join Upload & Sell

       2       end
    
 

Welcome back
Log in to your account