Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Disintegration Machine | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Origin |
Arthur Conan Doyle |
Year of Creation |
Unknown; Pre-1930s |
Type |
Teleportation Device |
Function |
Destroys objects on a molecular level and re-creates them in a different place. |
Modifications |
Coordinate system with GPS |
Location |
|
Collected by |
Warehouse 13 |
Retrieval |
January 18, 1930 |
Usage Period |
Sporadically 2010s-20s |
[Source] |
Origins[]
In 1929, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle wrote a short story as part of his ongoing 'Challenger Series' featuring an inventor and his contraption, a machine that could disintegrate solid matter and re-assemble it. Though Doyle passed away shortly after the completion of his story, his forays into science-fiction had attracted the attention of the still-young Warehouse 13. Going through his personal belongings, Agent M.C. Escher found a small hidden room containing a few curios, a working copy of the infamous Disintegrator among them.
Effects[]
The Disintegrator works much as it did in the original story, being able to disassemble and re-assemble matter. Time has not been kind to the device, however, and it is prone to malfunctioning occasionally. Regular upkeep and modifications by the Warehouse's resident techie Claudia Donovan have maximally reduced occurrences of malfunction and by hooking it to a GPS system, allows the Warehouse crew to transport items anywhere in the world. It is still rarely used for living things, as it remains unpredictable at times.