Yes, the color aberration on the135dc is strong. Can you post the wide open chart for it?
I am just about to take a plane. But the linked supplementary material has a some on DC 135 wide open , also figs S15 and S16.
There are some talk about decentered lens elements and that it is quite visible shooting wide open in MTF charts.
Are most Nikkors decentered?
Or how can you be sure to get a "perfect" lens?
Probably a dealer will not give you 10 samples to select from?
Maybe some "famous" persons can make special agreements with Nikon to get "hand picked" lenses?
Here I can buy a lens and I can return it if I don't like it within.....I think 14 days if I deliver it back in original box etc.
But I would not be able to detect if a lens is decentered unless it is quite bad wide open. Else I would not know if the performance wide open is "normal" or it cold be better. Then I would need some samples to test and select from.
There is no perfect realization of a designed lens. It is a gradual matter. The map assembly for the 105mm f/1.4 shows an example of a very good lens sample. The full field MTF analysis is awfully sensitive to the slightest departures (say on the order of 100 nm = 0.1 micro meter) from the ideal. There may also be minor striations in the glass, same in principle as with bad sighting conditions in warm, damp air. Usually there are some small departures affecting the axial symmetry, and these are the obviously showing in the maps as not due to limitations of the lens design.
The maps in my article underline this story. In the case of an Irix 15mm f/2.5 (shown in supplementary) after my routine MTF test for a incoming lens, I returned it at the predefined financial loss of 20%. I found it so bad across the board, that I did not trust that another example might have all the tolerances right. In the case of the Sigma 40mm f/1.4, I had the special opportunity to take 2 extra samples from the distributor for the purpose of the publication. And I was allowed to return whichever two I chose. So I kept the one with the least perturbation of high micro-contrast showing in the image center. After calibration, it became the best reference lens with the smallest deviation from the diffraction limit, see article for detail.
The trouble is, once you have seen a problem in the maps, you look out for it in the images. In the end I have tossed several lenses that were not satisfactory.
If you have the nerve to look at the maps for your lenses, you might set up such measurements with some perseverance. It is not that difficult to do as you have mtfmapper to start with, and my article going into most of the fine points. If you have a particularly interesting lens, we might discuss the options, and we could plan a measurement session on your next stop in Zurich.
A more accessible method for stronger decenterings is to take an images of a printed Siemens star at shooting distance say 30-50 x FL, in the center and near the 4 corners. If decentering strikes obviously in eyeball inspection you can take consequences. You may judge the lenses in your possession first, to gain experience.