There are good reasons, which I could detail (and have elsewhere); but I suspect you would ignore them because you can't rationalize the results.
I don't necessarily ignore what you say ... I merely remain unconvinced by 'one guy' in the face of many saying the opposite.
I very much respect your time, effort, expertise, and passion for categorizing and attempting to 'make sense' out of all the different offerings ... I am just skeptical when your results differ from "everyone else's," including the manufacturer.
I have not seen any claim by Nikon that the dynamic range of the D850 is the best that it has to offer.
Then perhaps you should take a closer look. On
the D810's product page, Nikon directly says,
- "The D810 truly raises the bar for image quality and dynamic range. An all-new FX-format full-frame image sensor design—36.3-megapixels with no optical low-pass filter—is paired with Nikon's innovative EXPEED 4 image processing for flawless detail retention from snow white to pitch black, beautiful noise-free images from ISO 64 to ISO 12,800, an extremely wide dynamic range, flattering well-saturated skin tones and much more."
There is not a single mention of 'dynamic range' on the D750's product page (which is odd,
if your graph is correct, and it holds the highest spot).
This flagrant omission by Nikon of any DR reference on the D750 page
only makes sense if your graph is in err ... and everyone else is correct ... namely that the D750 is
not the DR champ.
Meanwhile,
the D850's page references the D810, as the previous benchmark, and indicates the D850 moves beyond in dynamic range (and other attributes):
- When Nikon introduced the D800 and D800E, it set a new benchmark for DSLR image quality and super high resolution photography that approached medium format. Now, five years later, Nikon proudly introduces the next evolution in high resolution DSLRs, a camera that allows photographers to capture fast action in 45.7 megapixels of brilliant resolution. With remarkable advancements across the board—sensor design, autofocus, dynamic range, sensitivity,
lower noise, wider dynamic range, subtle tonal and textural details, high-speed continuous shooting at approx. 9 fps
So the way I see it we're simply debating whether the DxOMark Landscape score of the PhotonsToPhotos Photographic Dynamic Range (PDR) tells the "true" story.
I claim PDR is the superior measurement.
We're debating a lot more than you versus DxO; we're debating you versus DxO ... Nikon Corporation ... and virtually every other expert.
Your 'claim' of PDR being the superior measurement is not necessarily a fact.
Further, Nikon engineers have more resources and means with which to avail themselves (and ascertain/develop their own sensors) than any one man ... 'common' ... or with a degree. Nikon Corporation is filled with cutting edge scientists who have access to data and measuring devises you likely have never seen.
I simply don't believe Nikon has been missing a key fact about its own camera; rather, I simply believe your graph does
not represent any fact, but is merely a mistake.
As I mention above there are sound technical reasons that PDR is a better measure.
They may be beyond the scope of a simple NikonGear post (and have been discussed at length at places like dpreview).
However, if this interests you then you must at least have a good grasp of the Photon Transfer Curve (PTC).
I humbly concede my technical expertise does not match your own (at least with respect to photons). However, one of the aspects of my own profession (of ~30 years)
is to hire and vet "technical experts" for courtroom appearances. Accident recon experts, who measure everything from coefficients of friction, to velocity/impact, the integrity of steel/concrete, you name it. Degreed experts are hireable commodities ... and there is much disagreement, even among 'experts' ... and not all of them are going to be correct.
Celebrated PhDs have made mistakes, decorated surgeons have amputated the wrong legs, and anesthesiologists have killed patients with mis-calculated dosages. One thing I have learned is
no one is above error.
Even the most distinguished experts are subject to cross-examination, can be 'bought,' sometimes don't have
all the facts, and (in short) all have the potential to suffer the same 'room for doubt' as any other witness called upon to be put under the microscope of scrutiny.
Essentially, the sum and substance from your divergence from DxO, Nikon, and everyone else is, "
(You) claim PDR (your method) is the superior measurement."
While it's true I don't have the technical expertise, in your particular field, to debate with you ... I do have
a mountain of expertise in assessing evidence, vetting credibility, and determining witness strength (or weakness), including 'expert' witness testimony, by looking at
all the evidence.
In this thread alone, we've witnessed several mistakes already (misreading, not really checking Nikon's statements, etc.)
Hey, we all make mistakes, it's not a big deal. (Although sometimes it can be ...)
IMO, ignoring a mountain of evidence in support of 'one man's position' isn't the way to bet.
The inability to rationalize the results ("common man") does not invalidate them.
It's not my inability to rationalize; it's my unwillingness to accept 'you' as
the authority over all others, including the multi-billion dollar corporation who makes all the cameras in question.
I find the statistical probability of there being some mistake in
your calculations as being higher, and more likely, than every other entity being in err in their collective findings.
My last $0.02