Bond and his trusty Walther PPK. No surprises with that one. (Sony Pictures/YouTube)
A radio hidden inside a clothing brush allowed Bond to transmit messages in morse code in Live and Let Die. (Kent)
Bond's binoculars in "Goldeneye" had features not too different from Google Glass of the future, allowing auto focus/zoom, a digital camera and a satellite uplink to send visual data. (Bushnell)
In "Goldeneye," a size-34 leather belt concealed a piton hidden behind the buckle that could fire out up to 75 feet of high tensile wire designed to support the weight of an average person. In "Thunderball," 007 used a rocket belt when escaping after killing Jaques Bouvar. (Alexander Julian)
Bonds luxury watches never just tell time. They've come with grappling hooks and laser beam cutters and are sometimes equipped to detonate remote devices. (Omega)
Bond used a Polaroid camera with a built-in laser to take X-ray pictures in "License to Kill." (Polaroid)
In Octopussy, Bond's Montblanc fountain pen contained a mixture of Nitric and Hydrochloric acids. It also sported an earpiece listening device that worked in conjunction with Bond's wristwatch. (Mont Blanc)