The bottom image is the one from the question so I'm not sure how that proves your point about the engines. As for the first image do you have a source for that?
Is it from canon or fan made? The bottom one is from a Doctor Who still. In the Angels Takes Manhattan before the Doctor meets up with River he looks into something that looks like a mirror to fix his hair and then it comes into focus — Richard Ashton.
I know and thanks for copying a quote from the question too. I still don't see how it helps your case though. You need to add an explanation. No where in the image does it state what that Rolls Royce image is for. So, using it and stating without a doubt it's about the engines is a bit odd. The first image is from the Doctor Who Site and is a purchasable item.
You can buy on at Forbidden Planet, I'm told. Sign up or log in Sign up using Google. Sign up using Facebook. Sign up using Email and Password. Post as a guest Name. Email Required, but never shown. Upcoming Events. October Topic Challenge: Gene Wolfe ends in 6 days. November Topic Challenge: Samuel R. Delany in 6 days. Featured on Meta. Now live: A fully responsive profile. This iconic piece of equipment is arguably a greater companion to the Doctor than his actual companions , of which there have been many.
Moreover, The TARDIS has been a more consistent character than the Doctor himself, who has the ability to alter and regenerate his body 12 now 13 times instead of dying. Since the '60s, the TARDIS has retained its image to be that of a blue police box, occasionally getting somewhat noticeable face-lifts along the way.
Susan claimed she thought of it the first time she travelled on such a ship. Even members in the Sisterhood of the Karn, a more radical group within Time Lord society, were familiar with the term without any prompting from Susan.
It was also designed after the blue police boxes that once lined the streets in London. However, as technology progressed, the police box became obsolete and fell into the abyss of uselessness. This initiated a phase where the blue police box became more synonymous with Doctor Who than the Metropolitan Police, who first introduced the concept of the box back in In , BBC applied for a trademark on the blue police box to take advantage of a merchandising void that had existed for quite some time.
Naturally, the Metro Police objected to this trademark. What a world we live in! This is the phrase spoken by all mere mortals who first step foot in the TARDIS, and a phrase the Doctor very much looks forward to hearing. These are the words that all fans and lovers of Doctor Who desperately want to utter in real life. In The Robots of Death , the fourth Doctor explained to his companion, Leela, the principle behind this dimensional transcendentalism by using the analogy of how a larger cube will appear to fit within a smaller cube if placed at a distance.
The ability to capture both 'cubes' in the same space was a monumental discovery for the Time Lords. His enemies fear this sound and flee, and his allies rejoice when they hear it. Those who do not know the sound and mean to do harm to others will learn to dread it.
That sound did not used to exist, however. Enter Brian Hodgson. There were many consequent evolutions and samples of the sound, and in the 10 th Anniversary Special, The Three Doctors , fans heard the finalized version of the sound.
So shut up, River! The Eleventh Doctor : Shut up! Not like that The Eleventh Doctor : Still shut up. The Eleventh Doctor : I always read the instructions! Idris : There's a sign on my front door. You have been walking past it for seven hundred years. What does it say? The Eleventh Doctor : That's not instructions. Idris : There's an instruction at the bottom. The Eleventh Doctor : "Pull to open. Idris : Yes, and what do you do? The Eleventh Doctor : I push! Idris : Every single time.
Seven hundred years, police box doors open out the way. Are you there? It's so very dark in here. The Doctor : I'm here. Idris : I've been looking for a word. A big, complicated word but so sad. I've found it now. The Doctor : What word? Idris : "Alive. The Doctor : Alive isn't sad. Idris : It's sad when it's over. I'll always be here. But this is when we talked. And now, even that has come to an end.
There's something I didn't get to say to you. The Doctor : Goodbye. Idris : No. I just wanted to say Hello, Doctor. Idris : It's so very, very nice to meet you. The Doctor : [Crying] Please I don't want you to.
Idris : [Fades away in a ball of light and whispers] I love you. The Doctor : Do you have a name? Idris : Seven hundred years and finally he asks. The Doctor : What do I call you?
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