Tim
First ..you have to be brave to post tests like this ! Several things keep coming up .
1. The plane of focus needs to be exactly the same and it does not appear to be in the test . Looking at the blue and white bowl and the pattern on it ...you can see that the focus of the Q180 is slightly back or the D800 . This makes comparisons of items in front of the clear vase inconsistent . To avoid this you need a set up where you absolutely can see the plane of focus ..which means a focus point and some detail in front and back of the target . The area just in front and just in back of the target should look “equally sharp” .
2. Each image should have the same exposure and white balance . This looks pretty good but if I was using camera calibration ..I want those color charts as close as I can get . This is a point for debate ...but achievement of a finished file includes both in camera and post processing . I take it one step further myself and try to match the overall scene contrast and sharpen to optimum.
You can debate ..straight out of the camera ..but a good S2 file has a linear contrast curve ..and no life until I apply a preset . I believe this is to preserve the absolute maximum DR out of the camera . Sharpening corrects for the any blur caused by glass between the lens and the sensor ...minimal on MF ..not sure on the D800E .
3. The subject should include organic items ...glass,plastic etc have few tones . Skin of course is a good example but some fruits work . If the target is a single tone ..I can t see anything. This is the only way to see tone range a key factor in MF IQ.
Separate point on Guy s observation about mid tones on the D800. There has been speculation since the D3 that Nikon compressed the mid tones to allow for head room in the highlights and depth in the shadows . I have observed this in a major way with the D3 in sports on players shirts and on shooting cars . A good preset probably tones down the saturation(maybe luminosity). and adds clarity . The D3X was way better than the D3 as it had more DR to work with . I have no idea if this is fact but it is the way the files appear to me.
Hi Roger,
For all the above reasons, I only ever do these tests for my own curiosity and then share the results, including RAW files, for other people to play with if they think that'll be useful. I was only testing for shadow detail and noise here and though equal planes of sharpness, which with sensors of different sizes you will only get (assuming the same FOV) with a flat target (there are almost no flat targets in real life) would have been useful, they don't change the particular part of the results I was looking at.
As it happens I was indeed trying to get focus on the neck of the most central thin glass vase and, true to my real world approach, I gave it one go on the D800E in live view and four goes on the Phase
and in any event I wasn't doing a test for detail at all. Merely for shadow depth.
As for PP, that is very much season to taste and wasn't the point here, nor was the mid-range tonal expression, which can easily be tweaked in LR.
Per WB, all were WB'd off the chart and beyond that, it's purely up to the RAW converters and their various profiles. I have shown to my own satisfaction (and I think that Guy agrees) that the home brewed Xrite profiles are less useful than the canned ones: but again this was not about colour fidelity...
As you say, you have to be brave. Or stupid. Or both!