Praktica MTL 5B
Argus 35mm (it was my dad's - made in 1957)
Brownie Box (dad's)
Richoh 35mm
Minolta 35mm
Pentax 35mm
Polaroid SX70
Mamiya Medium Format
Nikon N90
*plus about 5 different rangefinders and point&shoots
Now I use a D80
Next week I'm ordering a D7100
Here are the cameras I have used thus far:
Kodak 110 film
Samsung 35mm
Fuji 2600 ( 2.0mp, 2002)
Panasonic DMC-FZ10 ( 4.0mp with 10x optical zoom in 2004)
Panasonic DMC-FZ50 (10mp with 12x optical zoom)
Sony a100 ( first DSLR in 2007)
Sony a350 ( 14.2mp in 2008)
Sony a700 ( 12.2mp in 2011)
Panasonic DMC-FZ150
Panasonic DMC-FZ200
Pentax K5 II (tested November 2013)
Nikon d610 ( January 2014 )
A Canon F1 with F1.4 lens and sports finder - wonderful for scientific photography because the finder could be swiveled around to WL position and used with your eye well back from the finder.
Sorry about the low resolution - this went up to my web site in the nineties when I had only 20mb of file space:
Some better pictures of the beast
I'm just going to start off with Digital...
The Kodak DCS200 is the first integrated Digital SLR- self-contained, did not need an umbilical to store an image.
kodak_front by fiftyonepointsix, on Flickr
This is the first Infrared DSLR sold by Kodak, the DCS200ir. Bought new, ~1993. $12,400 for the body alone. I've worked with digital imagers since 1981, but this one is the first one bought almost "off-the-shelf". Spent most of the 1980s working on data acquisition systems and image processing for custom IR sensors.
Picture taken with a Nikon E3, circa 1997.
Hasselblad 903SWC
It was actually my wife's but she sold it a couple of years ago. I'd rather like to have tried it with a digital back of some sort but I couldn't afford to buy it off her!
It went to a great home though - the guy who bought it carries it up mountains and takes superb pics.