radio
Weltron 2001 8-Track Tape Stereo AM-FM Radio
In the pre-title sequence of the James Bond film Moonraker (1979), we can spot a Weltron 2001 8-Track player.
The radio is located in the small airplane from Apollo Airways in which James Bond is travelling. When the pilot and stewardess reveal themselves to be bad, we can see the round Weltron radio next to the door that leads to the cockpit.
Marantz and Bowers & Wilkins stereo equipment
James Bond (Daniel Craig) owns a Marantz tuner, amplifier and cd player and Bowers & Wilkins speakers in his Jamaican home in No Time To Die.
Tivoli Model One Radio
James Bond (Daniel Craig) has a Tivoli Model One Radio in his Jamaican house in No Time To Die. (2021) and it can also be seen in Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery (2022) which also stars Daniel Craig.
Motorola HT1250 / GP380 Professional Series Two-Way Radio
James Bond (Pierce Brosnan) uses two Motorola radios in The World Is Not Enough (1999): a Motorola HT1250 or GP380 Professional Series and the Motorola TalkAbout TA280 SLK (read more).
Motorola TalkAbout TA280 SLK Two-Way Radio
In the movie The World Is Not Enough (1999), a Motorola TalkAbout TA280 SLK Two-Way Radio is prominently seen and used in the intense scene between James Bond (Pierce Brosnan) and Elektra (Sophie Marceau).
Philips DC954 car radio
In the movie The Living Daylights (1987), James Bond listens to a Philips DC954 car radio that has been modified by Q to receive police scanner frequencies.
Philips D8734 Boombox
In A View To A Kill (1985), James Bond and Pola Ivanova listen to a Philips UF-I 90 cassette tape on a Philips D8734 Boombox stereo system or ghettoblaster in the Nippon Relaxation Spa in San Francisco.
Barryvox Autophon VS 68
James Bond’s (Roger Moore) tracking device from the opening sequence of the movie A View to a Kill (1985) is an Autophon VS 68. The Autophon is used by Bond in Siberia to track down the body of MI6 agent 003 in the snow and recover the microchip. Bond wears a white Bogner outfit and uses Olin skis.
Philips 22RL798 Antoinette Transworld de Luxe radio
In the movie Diamonds Are Forever (1971), Ernst Stavro Blofeld (Charles Gray) owns a Philips 22RL798 Antoinette Transworld de Luxe radio. The radio can be seen clearly on Blofeld's desk in his office on the oil rig when he listens to a news broadcast about the nuclear explosions in North Dakota and Russia that Blofeld himself created.
Alpine 7817R
In the 1995 James Bond Film Goldeneye, the Aston Martin DB5 driven by James Bond featured an Alpine 7817R CD Tuner which acted as a communication device and colour printer/fax.