Now, you may have a database with disjunct tables, or a data warehouse - where everything isn't normalized (at all), and where there are no links what so ever between the tables. In that case, any dump would work.
I ASSUME, that a production database containing 38G data is containing graphics in some form (BLOB's), and then - ubuquitously - you have links from other tables. Right?
Therefore, you are - as far as I can see it - at risk of loosing serious links between tables (usually primary / foreign key pairs), thus, you may capture one table at the point of being updated/inserted into, while its dependant (which uses that table as its primary source) has not been updated, yet. Thus, you will loose the so called integrity of your database.
More often than not, it is extremely cumbersome to restablish integrity, most often due to that the system using/generating/maintaining the database system has not been made as a transaction oriented system, thus, relationships in the database cannot be tracked except via the primary/foreign key relations.
Thus, you may surely get away with copying your table without locks and many of the other proposals here above - but you are at risk of burning your fingers, and depending on, how sensitive the operations are of the system - you may burn yourself severely or just get a surface scratch.
Example: If your database is a critical mission database system, containing recommended heart beat rate for life support devices in an ICU, I would think more than twice, before I make the migration.
If, however, the database contains pictures from facebook or similar site = you may be able to live with the consequences of anything from 0 up to 129,388 lost links :-).
Now - so much for analysis. Solution:
YOU WOULD HAVE to create a software which does the dump for you with full integrity, table-set by table-set, tuple by tuple. You need to identify that cluster of data, which can be copied from your current online 24/7/365 base to your new base, then do that, then mark that it has been copied.
IFFF now changes occur to the records you have already copied, you will need to do subsequent copy of those. It can be a tricky affair to do so.
IFFF you are running a more advanced version of MYSQL - you can actually create another site and/or a replica, or a distributed database - and then get away with it, that way.
IFFF you have a window of lets say 10 minutes, which you can create if you need it, then you can also just COPY the physical files, located on the drive. I am talking about the .stm .std - and so on - files - then you can close down the server for a few minutes, then copy.
Now to a cardinal question:
You need to do maintenance of your machines from time to time. Haven't your system got space for that kind of operations? If not - then what will you do, when the hard disk crashes. Pay attention to the 'when' - not 'if'.