Barclay’s transporter breakdown

In the Transporter Room, Commander Riker authorizes the away team’s transport to the USS Yosemite despite Lieutenant Barclay’s escalating distress. O’Brien warns of ‘bandwidth limitations’ and ‘static charge accumulation,’ triggering Barclay’s repressed transporter phobia. As Riker, Worf, and Beverly dematerialize without incident, Barclay’s anxiety peaks—his breathing quickens, sweat breaks out, and he visibly struggles to maintain composure. When Geordi signals his turn, Barclay freezes, then abruptly declares, ‘I’m sorry—I can’t do this,’ before fleeing the room. The scene underscores the tension between duty and psychological fragility, leaving Barclay’s unresolved terror—and the unseen threat in the transporter beam—unaddressed. Riker’s decision to proceed without addressing Barclay’s warning foreshadows the lifeform’s later revelation as a direct consequence of this oversight.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

1

Despite Barclay's obvious anxiety, Riker swiftly orders the transport to proceed. Riker, Worf and Beverly are beamed to the USS Yosemite, as Barclay's discomfort grows with each successful transport.

Worry to rising panic

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

4

Confident and slightly distracted, his focus on the technical aspects of the transport overshadowing any concern for Barclay’s emotional state. Mild surprise at Barclay’s exit, but no deeper reflection on its implications.

O’Brien operates the transporter console with technical confidence, calmly detailing the bandwidth limitations and static charge accumulation to Riker. His matter-of-fact tone downplays the risks, even as he notes an 'ionic fluctuation' in the matter stream. He monitors each dematerialization closely but shows no concern for Barclay’s growing distress, focusing instead on the technical execution. His surprise at Barclay’s abrupt exit underscores the crew’s collective underestimation of the transporter’s hidden danger.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure the away team transports safely despite technical constraints.
  • Maintain the transporter’s operational integrity, even in the face of anomalies.
Active beliefs
  • Technical anomalies are manageable and not cause for alarm.
  • Barclay’s reaction is an overreaction to routine transporter quirks.
Character traits
Technically assured Reassuring but detached Prioritizes procedural efficiency over emotional cues Quick to dismiss anomalies as 'no problem' unless they disrupt the system
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Focused and unperturbed, his Klingon warrior instincts channeling into the mission’s execution without emotional distraction.

Worf steps onto the transporter stage without hesitation after Riker, his Klingon stoicism evident as he observes the prolonged dematerialization process. He shows no reaction to Barclay’s growing distress, focusing solely on the mission. His participation reinforces the crew’s collective disregard for Barclay’s unspoken fear, contributing to the scene’s foreshadowing of the transporter’s hidden danger.

Goals in this moment
  • Support Riker’s leadership by following orders without question.
  • Ensure the away team’s safety by adhering to transporter protocols, despite technical anomalies.
Active beliefs
  • Personal fears are irrelevant in the face of duty.
  • O’Brien’s technical oversight is sufficient to mitigate risks.
Character traits
Stoic and disciplined Mission-oriented Unreactive to emotional cues unless they directly impact tactical objectives Trusts Starfleet protocols implicitly
Follow Worf, son …'s journey

Determined and slightly impatient, masking any concern for Barclay’s visible distress under the weight of the mission’s urgency.

Commander Riker steps onto the transporter stage with confident authority, authorizing the away mission despite O’Brien’s technical warnings. He dematerializes smoothly, his focus unwavering on the mission’s urgency. His decision to proceed without addressing Barclay’s distress reflects his prioritization of duty over individual psychological struggles, setting the stage for the later revelation of the transporter lifeform.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure the away team reaches the USS Yosemite to assess the stranded vessel’s condition.
  • Maintain operational efficiency by adhering to the transporter’s technical constraints without delay.
Active beliefs
  • The mission’s success outweighs individual discomfort or phobias.
  • O’Brien’s technical reassurances are sufficient to proceed, despite Barclay’s reaction.
Character traits
Decisive Mission-focused Empathetically blind to personal struggles in high-pressure situations Trusts institutional protocols over individual warnings
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Supporting 1

Calm and focused, her medical training allowing her to compartmentalize technical concerns. She shows no sign of sharing Barclay’s anxiety, reinforcing the crew’s underestimation of the transporter’s danger.

Beverly steps onto the transporter stage after Worf, her professional demeanor unshaken by O’Brien’s mention of an 'ionic fluctuation.' She dematerializes without incident, her calm presence contrasting with Barclay’s escalating panic. Her lack of reaction to the technical anomaly reinforces the crew’s collective dismissal of Barclay’s unspoken warning, foreshadowing the lifeform’s later revelation.

Goals in this moment
  • Support the away mission by transporting without delay.
  • Maintain professional composure, even in the face of technical anomalies.
Active beliefs
  • O’Brien’s reassurances are sufficient to proceed safely.
  • Barclay’s distress is a personal issue unrelated to the mission’s technical feasibility.
Character traits
Professionally composed Unreactive to technical anomalies unless they pose immediate medical risk Empathetic but not intrusive in high-pressure situations Trusts the crew’s technical expertise implicitly
Follow Reginald Barclay's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

3
USS Enterprise Transporter Console

The USS Enterprise Transporter Console serves as the critical interface for the away team’s transport, its screens displaying bandwidth limitations, static charge accumulation, and an ionic fluctuation in the matter stream. O’Brien’s hands move across its panels with practiced ease, engaging system interlocks and synchronizing pattern buffers as each crew member dematerializes. The console’s humming and flickering readouts amplify Barclay’s anxiety, foreshadowing the lifeform’s presence in the transporter beam. Its technical anomalies—downplayed by O’Brien—become the harbingers of the episode’s central threat.

Before: Operational but strained, displaying warnings of bandwidth limitations, …
After: The console remains operational, but its readouts and …
Before: Operational but strained, displaying warnings of bandwidth limitations, static charge accumulation, and an ionic fluctuation. The console’s systems are functioning within parameters, though the prolonged transport cycles suggest underlying instability.
After: The console remains operational, but its readouts and the crew’s reactions hint at unaddressed technical anomalies. Barclay’s flee leaves the console’s warnings unheeded, setting the stage for the lifeform’s later manifestation.
Isolinear Optical Chips

Barclay’s Wall Panel Isolinear Chips serve as a distraction early in the scene, their delicate components a temporary focus for his nervous energy. As O’Brien details the transporter’s technical limitations, Barclay abandons the chips, his attention shifting entirely to the humming transporter. The chips symbolize his attempt to ground himself in routine engineering tasks, a futile effort to suppress his phobia. Their abandonment mirrors his inability to escape the transporter’s psychological grip, foreshadowing his later breakdown.

Before: Partially extracted from the wall panel, their components …
After: The chips remain in the wall panel, forgotten …
Before: Partially extracted from the wall panel, their components gleaming under the transporter room’s harsh lights. Barclay handles them with unsteady hands, his distraction growing as the transporter hums.
After: The chips remain in the wall panel, forgotten as Barclay flees. Their symbolic role as a distraction fades, leaving his phobia—and the transporter’s hidden threat—unresolved.
Transporter Platform (USS Enterprise-D)

The Transporter Room Three Stage serves as the physical platform for dematerialization, its glowing pads and swirling effects marking the crew’s transition to the USS Yosemite. The stage’s prolonged hum and extended dematerialization sequences—noticeably longer and louder than normal—intensify Barclay’s phobia. His hesitation on the stage, followed by his abrupt exit, contrasts sharply with the smooth transports of Riker, Worf, and Beverly. The stage’s role as a threshold between safety and danger underscores the episode’s theme of unseen threats lurking in routine technology.

Before: Activated and ready, its pads glowing as the …
After: The stage remains functional, but Barclay’s refusal to …
Before: Activated and ready, its pads glowing as the transporter system charges. The stage is a focal point of tension, its hum and effects amplifying Barclay’s distress.
After: The stage remains functional, but Barclay’s refusal to transport leaves it symbolically charged with the unaddressed danger of the transporter beam.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 1
Causal

"Geordi assigns Barclay to the away team despite Barclay's reluctance (9e55e600), directly causing Barclay to panic and back out of the transport at the last second (5854668f)."

Barclay proposes transporter bridge workaround
S6E2 · Realm of Fear
What this causes 1
Causal

"Barclay's public display of fear (5854668f) leads him to seek counsel with Troi to express his deep-seated fear of transporting (dadb97be)."

Barclay confesses transporter phobia to Troi
S6E2 · Realm of Fear

Key Dialogue

"O'BRIEN: There may be a small amount of static charge accumulation. You'll feel a bit of tingling—nothing to worry about."
"BARCLAY: What do you... what exactly do you mean by a bumpy ride?"
"BARCLAY: I'm sorry—I can't do this."