I am tired, so I asked ChatGPT to write a blog post about my usually go-to camera setup.
Here are the results, after about the 4th re-write:
Why I Still Shoot a Nikon D40X with a Beat-Up 135mm in 2026
In 2026, I probably shouldn’t be using a Nikon D40X.
I own better cameras. A Sony A6000 sits nearby. So does a Nikon D3500—both faster, sharper, and far more capable in just about every measurable way.
And yet, more often than not, I reach past them.
I pick up the D40X—usually with a worn, slightly questionable Spiratone 135mm lens attached—and head out the door.
Not because it’s better.
Because it’s the one I keep coming back to.
It Makes Me Slow Down (Whether I Want To or Not)
Nothing about this setup is fast.
Manual focus at 135mm forces patience. The viewfinder isn’t especially bright. If my subject shifts even a little, I’m adjusting again. There’s no tracking, no burst safety net, no “just hold the button and hope.”
Exposure takes intention too. With fully manual lenses, the D40X doesn’t always give me much to go on. I’ve learned to read the scene instead—light, contrast, where things might blow out.
I take fewer photos now.
But they’re more deliberate.
I Have Better Gear—And Still Don’t Use It
This is the part that surprises people.
The Sony A6000 is objectively better for speed and convenience. The Nikon D3500 is cleaner, more forgiving, and easier in almost every situation.
If I wanted reliability, those would be obvious choices.
But they make it easy to disengage. I can shoot without thinking too much, fix things later, rely on the camera to carry more of the process.
With the D40X, I don’t have that option.
And that changes everything.
The Lenses Are Half the Experience
I rotate through a handful of vintage lenses:
- A 28mm wide-angle that’s great for wandering and street shots
- An old Nikon 50mm f/1.8 that originally came with my Nikon F
- And, more often than not, that beat-up Spiratone 135mm
Each one has its own quirks. None of them are perfect.
But I keep coming back to the Spiratone.
It’s not the sharpest. The contrast can be unpredictable. It flares when it wants to. Physically, it feels like it’s been around longer than I have.
And still—there’s something about the way it renders an image that keeps pulling me back.
The Images Aren’t “Perfect”—But They’re Mine
There’s a common assumption that shooting with older gear means settling for worse results.
That hasn’t really been my experience.
At this point, I get what I’m aiming for most of the time.
Not by accident—by familiarity.
I know how the D40X handles light. I know how far I can push it before highlights disappear. I know how the Spiratone behaves wide open versus stopped down. I know when I’ll probably miss focus—and when I won’t.
The images aren’t clinically sharp or technically flawless.
But they’re not terrible. Not even close.
They’re intentional. And more often than not, they match what I had in mind when I pressed the shutter.
When It Works, It Still Feels Earned
Even now, after getting used to the setup, there’s still a small moment of satisfaction when everything lines up:
- Focus lands exactly where I want it
- Exposure is right without much correction
- The lens does something interesting with the light
It doesn’t feel automatic. It feels like participation.
That hasn’t gone away.
It Changed the Way I Shoot (and See)
Using this combination over time has rewired how I approach photography.
I notice light more quickly. I think about contrast before I raise the camera. I position myself more carefully, knowing I don’t have unlimited flexibility afterward.
And because I’m not relying on speed or automation, I’m more present in the process.
It’s not just slower—it’s more deliberate.
Why I Keep Coming Back
I could switch. It would be easy.
The Sony A6000 and Nikon D3500 are right there, ready to make things smoother, faster, more consistent.
But every time I use them for a while, I eventually drift back.
Back to the D40X.
Back to manual focus.
Back to that slightly unpredictable Spiratone 135mm.
Because as much as those newer cameras improve the results, this setup improves my involvement.
Final Thoughts
I don’t use the Nikon D40X with a mix of vintage lenses—especially that beat-up Spiratone 135mm lens—because it’s the easiest way to shoot.
It isn’t.
I use it because it keeps me engaged, and because after spending enough time with it, it gives me exactly what I’m looking for more often than not.
In a time when cameras can do almost everything for you, there’s something satisfying about using one that still asks something back.
And for me, that’s enough to keep reaching for it.
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