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Object

Master's Stolen TARDIS Component (Mind-Control/Dematerialisation Circuit)

A portable alien circuit stolen by the Doctor from the Master's horsebox TARDIS. This component serves dual purposes: (1) as a mind-control technology (used for human manipulation, as seen when Philips hammers it in defiance before dying), and (2) as a TARDIS dematerialisation circuit (intended as a replacement for the Doctor's faulty Mark 1 system). The Doctor carries it into the UNIT laboratory, where his botched experiments with it—first as a sabotage tool (mind-control) and later as a dematerialisation replacement—trigger sparks, smoke, and ultimately strand both Time Lords on Earth. Key interactions include Rossini's accusation of theft, Philips' defiant destruction attempt, and the Doctor's frustrated tinkering amid UNIT tensions. The component's dual functionality reflects the Master's advanced but incompatible alien technology, which backfires to trap both the Doctor and the Master during the Nestene crisis.
5 appearances

Purpose

Enables the Master's remote control over human minds, compelling actions like Rossini's assault.

Significance

Exposes the Master's scheme when the Doctor steals it, disrupting operations and escalating their rivalry. Philips' damage marks human resistance, while the Doctor's possession advances his counter-strategy against the Auton threat.

Appearances in the Narrative

When this object appears and how it's used

5 moments
S8E1 · Terror of the Autons Part 1
Doctor recognizes stolen Nestene threat

The TARDIS dematerialisation mechanism piece is the immediate focus of the Doctor’s frustration, serving as a metaphor for his larger struggles: his exile on Earth, his reliance on UNIT’s resources, and his inability to repair his ship. The piece, cradled in a custom holder on the lab bench, becomes the target of his steady-state micro-welding device—a Lammerdenian technique he wields with precision, only for it to malfunction spectacularly. The smoke and sparks force Jo Grant to intervene with the fire extinguisher, destroying the Doctor’s ‘three months of delicate work’ and sparking their first conflict. The piece’s failure symbolizes the Doctor’s temporary powerlessness, his dependence on others (like Jo), and the fragility of his plans.

Before: Intact but damaged, secured in the lab bench’s custom holder, awaiting repair via the Doctor’s steady-state micro-welding device. The piece is a critical component for the TARDIS’s dematerialisation, representing the Doctor’s best chance at regaining his mobility and independence.
After: Ruined, coated in fire-extinguisher foam and rendered unusable by Jo Grant’s intervention. The Doctor’s outburst—‘You’ve destroyed three months of work!’—highlights the piece’s symbolic and practical significance: not just a mechanical part, but a tangible representation of his stalled progress and his frustration with Earth-bound limitations.
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