The Doctor's TARDIS (Time Is Everything)

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Revision as of 19:56, 3 September 2020 by CzechBot (talk | contribs) (Bot: Cosmetic changes)
This subject is not a valid source for writing our in-universe articles, and may only be referenced in behind the scenes sections or other invalid-tagged articles.

The aged incarnation of the Doctor who used the Berillian time transformer still travelled in the TARDIS, which flew through a lime-green Time Vortex. The Ship's exterior was now a brighter shade of blue than the usual TARDIS blue; when landing, it would first appear slightly above the ground, and then fully settle down as it materialised.

Interior

The hexagonal console and blue time rotor of this timeship. (NOTVALID: Superannuation advertisements)

This TARDIS's console room was fairly dark, lit up with the blue glow of the short, TARDIS blue time rotor at the center of its control console. Wiring hung from the ceiling in several places. The TARDIS scanner screen was mobile, allowing the Doctor to pull it down and show its content to people with more emphasis. Text and images on the scanner appeared in electric green on a black background.

This TARDIS possessed an inner door with a large porthole through which the Doctor could somehow watch what was going on directly outside the TARDIS, despite the police box outer plasmic shell's outer door being clearly distinct from this door, and consequently porthole-less. The glass of the porthole was penetrable by a sonic screwdriver's soundwaves, allowing the Doctor to still influence the surroundings of the box even while he was safe inside. (NOTVALID: Superannuation advertisements)

Behind the scenes

  • The appearance of the TARDIS scanner video screen as a small monitor whose position in the control room can be freely adjusted by hand by the Doctor, which makes its debut with this TARDIS interior, would be incorporated into the design of the Ninth Doctor's TARDIS, and all other BBC Wales TARDIS interiors, from Rose onwards.