Nice to see I'm not the only one still using this gear. You guys/gals have tempted me into writing my first post.
Several years ago (I'm guessing around 1999 or so), I was perusing an auction site several of us were using where all benefits were going to a friend who had a motorcycle accident, and was not in a good state (brain injury. The site and gentleman are still around). One of my friends was auctioning off some old camera gear he was no longer using; like many others, he was switching to digital.
I had used my parents' Pentax K1000 before, and really liked it (digression: My brother still uses that camera). So I bid, and got this old gear. It is still pretty much my only camera (sorta...see below). I figured, I wanted to learn as much of the theory of photography as possible, so what better way than a fully manual camera?
What I got in that auction:
Nikkormat FT, including the shoe (not hot shoe) for the flash, which is apparently quite rare,
Nikkor-P 105/2.5 (man, do I love that lens)
Assorted filters, Samigon 2x lens extender (maybe used it once for macro shots), cable shutter release, and probably a few more things I'm forgetting.
I've almost immediately added:
Nikkor-S-C 50/1.4 (bought it off John White of AIConversions.com, so it's been AIed by him. I had no need for the conversion, but nice if I ever get that FM2 I keep talking about!)
Vivitar 283 flash,
Lunasix 3 light meter (don't trust the FT one, obviously, and means I don't need any battery at all in the camera). Someone has also given me their old Lunasix 3, so I have a backup.
Someone has also sent me a spare Nikkormat FTn body with a Soligar 35mm-105mm lens. Never used either (why would I?)
I need to add more prime lenses, but those two have served me well.
As far as learning? You know how that goes. I just set up my own darkroom in our house, since we were reno-ing the basement anyway. I just showed up to an event (some Mixed Martial Arts weigh-ins, as I train with some professional fighters) to shoot, and the local "guy who covers every event" was there. He had one (not sure what, but surely super-expensive) digital camera, two slave units on tripods so that he could get two more angles of every shot. Nice guy. His website has thousands of photos for sale, as he can just stay there and hold the shutter button. He thought my gear might be interfering with his slave units until I pointed out that my gear didn't have batteries.
Nice to see others are still using this type of gear.