Hey Pepe, do what I've done before, when people are claiming they see vast differences in two lenses. Make them put their money were their mouth is. All your shots look fantastic to me anyway, I don't pixel peek and stare at a leaf in the very corner of a frame, comparing it with another shot with another lens. 99.9% of photograph viewers don't either.
But shoot a few good shots with both lenses. Post them here, without revealing which is which. Let the experts try to guess. In my experience, they never can, verifying my belief that the photographer's skill is more important that minuscule lens differences.
Very seldom will someone show side by side identical shots, as you have done. They'll show a single great shot of a rock or tree or pretty girl and say "See?! The Seranocronicar is the BEST lens ever made!" It's ridiculous. But even when you show comparison shots, some people start talking about the "sphericalness" or "bokeh" of the one they advocate. Or they'll say, "yes, they are practically identical here....but when you [print at 16x20, scan with an xyz...etc.] you'll see the difference
then."
See this comparison I did between the Canon 35/2 and the Olympus Pen-F 38/1.8:
https://www.rangefinderforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=140887 People started saying because my test was with a small APS-C sensor, my results (the Pen-F was sharper, with warmer colors) were not what you'd see on larger film/sensors. Sorry, but sharp is sharp, when I'm looking at a center comparison what you see is what you get. In that thread people were saying "yeah, it's better, but on a larger sensor it wouldn't be (even in the center!). Optics don't work like that. You have coverage, and towards the edge of the coverage you start to get aberrations. Some designs show more edge aberrations than others. By the same token, some designs are sharper in the center. And that's what most people are looking at.