Message pod: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
m (changing over to new prefixes per Forum:Prefix simplification)
(Removing policy violating image.)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Infobox Object  
{{Infobox Object  
|image = messagepod.png
|image =  
|name = Message Pod
|name = Message Pod
|type = Sealed container
|type = Sealed container
Line 15: Line 15:


[[Iris Wildthyme]] also had a message pod, but she never bothered to deliver it. The [[Fourth Doctor]] used it to capture Lady [[Huntingdon]]. He used [[Iris Wildthyme's TARDIS]] to do a [[particle reversal]], pulling her inside the message pod. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Old Flames]]'')
[[Iris Wildthyme]] also had a message pod, but she never bothered to deliver it. The [[Fourth Doctor]] used it to capture Lady [[Huntingdon]]. He used [[Iris Wildthyme's TARDIS]] to do a [[particle reversal]], pulling her inside the message pod. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Old Flames]]'')
[[Category:Gallifreyan technology]]
[[Category:Gallifreyan technology]]

Revision as of 16:09, 9 March 2014

A message pod was a device used by the Time Lords as, essentially, a secure courier for delivery of messages or small objects to a specific recipient.

Features

The pod would only open when touched by the person for whom the message was intended. Much like the outer plasmic shell of a TARDIS, the exterior of the pod was nearly invulnerable to outside forces. The message pod would usually pre-program its destination into a nearby TARDIS. (TV: The Mutants) It could be connected to a TARDIS' time rotor to control it. (PROSE: Old Flames)

History

The Time Lords used a message pod to send the Third Doctor on a mission to Solos to deliver a set of ancient tablets to Ky, a Solonian resistance figure. It contained engravings of Solonian writing. (TV: The Mutants)

Iris Wildthyme also had a message pod, but she never bothered to deliver it. The Fourth Doctor used it to capture Lady Huntingdon. He used Iris Wildthyme's TARDIS to do a particle reversal, pulling her inside the message pod. (PROSE: Old Flames)