TARDIS control room: Difference between revisions

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The [[Fifth Doctor]] rebuilt the console following its damage by Cyberguns. ([[DW]]: ''[[Earthshock]]'') He later refurbished it completely, giving it a sleeker, more high-tech appearance. ([[DW]]: ''[[The Five Doctors]]'')
The [[Fifth Doctor]] rebuilt the console following its damage by Cyberguns. ([[DW]]: ''[[Earthshock]]'') He later refurbished it completely, giving it a sleeker, more high-tech appearance. ([[DW]]: ''[[The Five Doctors]]'')
===Alternate first version===
[[File:Cushing-control-room.png|thumb|TARDIS's control room from Doctor Who and the Daleks.]]The noncanonical Peter Cushing Doctor Who's control room had no hexagonal console at all, but was instead made up of random technological elements (oscillioscopes and other gadgets) and wiring lining the walls, a scanner screen on one wall…and a rocking chair. ([[Doctor Who and the Daleks|''Doctor Who and the Daleks'']] ).


===Second version===
===Second version===

Revision as of 19:12, 17 May 2011

A TARDIS console room or control room was the area which housed the TARDIS' generally hexagonal control console, by which the TARDIS was operated. The room was usually laid out such that the console was in the middle of the room, or at least so that it was a comfortable distance from all interior walls. Such rooms also had immediate access to an exterior door, and its interior walls were covered in roundels. Other than those generalizations, the shape of a control room, even within just the Doctor's TARDIS was highly variable.

The Doctor's console room

First version

File:DoctorsTARDIS-Fifth.png
The revamped TARDIS console. (DW: The Five Doctors)

When the interior of the TARDIS was first seen by Ian Chesterton and Barbara Wright it was a bright white room, with roundels on the walls and a large computer bank taking up a major part of the 'back' wall. These computer banks contained the fault locator along with various systems relating to navigational control. (DW: An Unearthly Child, DW: The Daleks)

This console was removed by the Third Doctor during his exile on Earth for use in his laboratory. (DW: Inferno) The Doctor returned it to its old place later. (DW: Terror of the Autons)

The Doctor continued to rebuild the TARDIS console and the main interior of the TARDIS console room using "UNIT funds and equipment" throughout his exile as UNIT's scientific adviser. (DW: The Three Doctors)

The Doctor briefly changed the walls of the console room with what appeared like plastic furnishings appearing along the edges of the roundels. One of the roundels served as a replacement for the scanner, a picture appearing in its centre. (DW: The Time Monster) He later reverted to the more traditional design. (DW: The Three Doctors)

The Fifth Doctor rebuilt the console following its damage by Cyberguns. (DW: Earthshock) He later refurbished it completely, giving it a sleeker, more high-tech appearance. (DW: The Five Doctors)

Second version

File:DoctorsTARDIS-Eight.png
The Doctor's TARDIS Console Room during his seventh and eighth life. (DW: Doctor Who)

The whole TARDIS interior went through its most radical change seen following the TARDIS's entrapment inside the Doctor's family estate, the House of Lungbarrow (NA: Lungbarrow), rebuilding itself to resemble the house after the Doctor temporarily severed the link between the interior and exterior to prevent his family stealing the ship. After he restored the TARDIS, the console had assumed a more Gothic, Victorian appearance, and included a library. Like the roof of an observatory or a planetarium, the ceiling of the control room "opened", revealing the Infinity Chamber which showed the outside and could display holographic images. The smaller scanner, which resembled an antique black and white television set, displayed other information. (DW: Doctor Who)

File:Sins of the fathers.jpg
The time column of the second version. (DWM: Sins of the Fathers)

Third version

See Edifice

Following the TARDIS' destruction after it was caught in a dimensional tear (EDA: The Shadows of Avalon), it reconstructed itself into a massive bone-like structure that came to be known as the Edifice; its console room at this stage was apparently based on the console room at the time of destruction, but appeared, like the rest of the ship, to be made of bone, due to the TARDIS containing the Faction Paradox biodata virus that had infected the Third Doctor after his early regeneration (EDA: Interference - Book Two, The Ancestor Cell). The console also manifested an 'avatar' of the Third Doctor composed of the dust in the ship, apparently the manifestation of the Third Doctor who should have existed before the Faction changed his history. This console room was 'destroyed' when the Doctor drained the Edifice of all its power in order to fire the ship's ancient weapon systems, forcing the universe to 'choose' realities and decide whether the Doctor remained himself or became a member of the Faction. (EDA: The Ancestor Cell)

Fourth version

The TARDIS completed its regeneration on Earth, after the Doctor exhausted its power in the destruction of Gallifrey. Its interior now resembled a mixture of the original console room and the Eighth Doctor's console room. (EDA: Escape Velocity) The console was initially octagonal, (EDA: The Slow Empire) but was later reconfigured to be pentagonal. (EDA: Trading Futures) The Control Room was now hexagonal and contained four alcoves, two on either side of the main doors and the interior door. One contained filing cabinets and chests, another led to the library, the third contained a laboratory, and the fourth contained a kitchen (which looked out onto a English countryside vista and was an exact replica of the kitchen in the Doctor's house in Kent). This interior was destroyed when the Doctor used the TARDIS to contain the explosion of a cold fusion generator created by the TARDIS' original owner. (EDA: The Gallifrey Chronicles)

Fifth version

File:DoctorsTARDIS-Ninth.png
The TARDIS as it looked when the Ninth Doctor piloted it. (DW: The End of the World)

By the Doctor's ninth incarnation, the control room had been changed to its "Coral" theme, giving it a more organic design than the previous console rooms. (DW: Time Crash) Hexagonal impressions on the walls had replaced the roundels, and the console itself incorporated many odds and ends ranging from a device resembling a bicycle pump to a mallet used for occasional percussive maintenance. (DW: Rose onwards) It also contained a working telephone. (DW: World War Three) The console room consisted of a circular area with a red tiled ramp leading from the doors to a hexagonal platform. On the hexagonal platform was a second, circular platform. The entire room was supported by six coral pillars that met with the top of the time rotor at the rooms ceiling. Under the main platform were storage areas large enough for the Doctor to enter (DW: Army of Ghosts), though some were packed to just below the top. (DW: The Unicorn and the Wasp)

Later, the console room was set on fire and at least one column destroyed by the Tenth Doctor's violent regeneration into his eleventh incarnation. (DW: The End of Time)

The Eleventh Doctor later returned to this version of the console room, rebuilt as a secondary control room, with Amy Pond, Rory Williams, and the TARDIS herself, when facing the House. The House deleted the room in order to gain the power needed to enter the universe. (DW: The Doctor's Wife)

Sixth version

File:New Control Room.png
The Doctor and Amy Pond in the newly repaired control room. (DW: The Eleventh Hour)

Due to the violent nature of the Tenth Doctor's regeneration and the resultant damage to the TARDIS, it required time to repair itself. After the ordeal involving the Atraxi attempting to recapture Prisoner Zero had been resolved, the Doctor returned to the TARDIS and, upon seeing the changes to the control room, immediately proceeded to take the TARDIS to the moon and back in order to "run her in". Soon after taking Amy Pond on board for the first time, the new TARDIS console also provided the Doctor with a new sonic screwdriver, as the previous one had just been destroyed. (DW: The Eleventh Hour)

Changes to the control room included a new hexagonal console with instruments resembling a typewriter, a telegraph, a gramophone, a set of hot and cold taps, and a view-screen made by Magpie Electricals. Each side of the console was centred around a different function (Helm, navigation, diagnostic, communications, fabrication, mechanical)[1] A larger, circular view screen was set into one of the walls. (DW: Victory of the Daleks, The Hungry Earth) There were fewer roundels on the walls than in the past, and an area located underneath the main console which housed the Heart of the TARDIS. This version also possessed an actual phone, on which people could call the Doctor. (DW: Victory of the Daleks)

It had at least three floors: a lower section, the console room level, and the second level. (DW: The Eleventh Hour)

The Eleventh Doctor's console

The various systems of the Eleventh Doctor's console room were fairly well-understood. According to one account, each of the six panels controlled discrete functions. (VG: TARDIS)

  • The mechanical panel contained the engine release lever, door release lever, gyroscopic stabiliser, locking down mechanism (described as a physical handbrake) and the TARDIS display dials.
  • The helm panel contained the eyepiece (an alternative to visual scanners), the time rotor handbrake and the space/time throttle.
  • The navigation panel contained a time and space forward/back control, directional pointer, atom accelerator (the spinning spiky ball) and the spatial location input (a computer keyboard).
  • The diagnostic panel contained the inertial dampers, the cooling systems (gauges), a bunsen burner and a microphone/water dispenser.
  • The communications panel contained an analogue telephone, digital com, voice recorder, analogue radio waves detector/monitor/changer and a scanner/typewriter.
  • The fabrication panel contained the materialise/dematerialise function, harmonic generator, time altimeter, a fabrication dispenser (which was described as being able to produce sonic screwdrivers and other technology - which eventually housed the Laser Screwdriver) and a Heisenberg focusing device which was used to break Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle. This device may also have been known as a zigzag plotter.

Secondary control room

There existed a small secondary control or console room which the Doctor claimed may have been the original console room. It was far simpler than the main control room, with the console resembling a desk, no visible time rotor and all the controls hidden behind what appeared to be wooden panelling. It had more subtle roundels, some of them framing stained glass windows. For a brief period, the Fourth Doctor used this as the main control room. (DW: The Masque of Mandragora, The Hand of Fear, The Deadly Assassin, The Robots of Death, The Invisible Enemy)

While looking for a Kymbra Chimera which had invaded the TARDIS, the Sixth Doctor and Frobisher discovered it and Peri in the secondary control room. (DWM: Changes)

At one stage, the Seventh Doctor suspected that the secondary control room had been deleted, as he hadn't seen it in a while. (NA: Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible)

Other control rooms

There also existed a tertiary control room, which was cool and dark grey with a small mushroom shaped console. (NA: Nightshade, NA: Deceit)

The Tenth Doctor once claimed that all previous console rooms remained within the TARDIS, waiting to be reused, much as the secondary control room had been accidentally rediscovered by the Fourth Doctor. He further intimated that there may have been even more control rooms than were known to have been used. (IDW: Tesseract)

The TARDIS told the Eleventh Doctor it had so far archived 30 control rooms. The Doctor argued he had only changed the desktop theme a dozen times and it can't archive things that haven't happened yet. The TARDIS merely replied that he cannot. (DW: The Doctor's Wife)

Control rooms of other TARDISes

to be added

Footnotes

  1. Doctor Who Confidential: Call Me the Doctor"