I still think the whole idea behind any APO lens is to correct color, but newer mind - Fell free to continue your journey No problem!
Very interesting findings on what might be the future standard on tripod/studio cameras
Over these last years, I too, as you must know, have championed APO lenses for what they brought to color by removing the various aberrations (fringing, etc.). This lets the color be seen. However, I did not pay enough attention to the disadvantages of the Bayer interpolation method, per se, and the fact that it is an impure approach. It can never be definitive because it is, by definition, an approximation. No amount of fiddling will make it represent each pixel/site in a unique way.
Pixel-shifting is just in its infancy as far as products we can use, but the concept of true color for each pixel/site (however they do it) makes sense. As mentioned, I saw this in the Sony A7s, as far as dynamic range and luminosity is concerned by just allocating a deeper “well” for each site. Pixel-shifting is doing something similar by removing the approximation achieved with the Bayer system and replacing it with unique pixel/sites, with no smearing of adjacent sites together.
As a close-up photographer who shoots still subjects, this is like going to heaven. Of course I felt the same way when the D810 came out, etc. Anyway, I see progress and light at the end of the tunnel, where Canon and Nikon have done little for me lately.