Posts Tagged ‘Lunar Rover’
1959 – Lunar Robot Mobot (Concept) – Hughes Aircraft (American)
MACHINE TO EXPLORE MOON
FIRST EXPLORER of the moon may be a machine. Roaming the crust, it would collect samples of rocks and dust with mechanical fingers, under remote control of spacemen remaining safely within a landed rocket ship. Hughes Aircraft company designers say it could be patterned closely after their Mobot, a mobile mechanical manipulator whose dexterity inspired the idea.
Source: Popular Science July, 1959.
Another Hughes Mobot concept showing similar arm configuration.
See other early Teleoperators here.
See other early Lunar Robots here.
1901-3 – Walking Lunar Vehicle (Science Fiction) – Jerzy Zulawski (Polish)


See all the known Steam Men and early Walking Machines here.
1960 – “Homobile” Lunar Rover – Hugo Gernsback (American)
In 1960, the indefatigable Gernsback came out with another lunar rover design. He called it the “Homobile.” It had a pressurized cabin mounted on tracks and powered by electricity from fuel cells, with a leg-powered generator as an alternate source of energy. The cabin also had a pair of manipulator arms.
Source:Originally from “1961 Forecast”, 1960 pp8-11 by Hugo Gernsback.
Similar illustrations from an early book of space travel and a Sci-fi magazine.
Illustration from Première Croisière Sur La Lune by Fletcher Pratt, 1952.
Illustration by Frank R. Paul, Fantastic Adventure, 1940.
See other early Space Teleoperators here.
See other early Lunar Robots here.
2002 – ESA Lunar Rover – (Student concept) – Europe
DATE:25/04/08
SOURCE:Flightglobal.com
ESA to undertake lunar rover study
By Rob Coppinger
The European Space Agency is offering €500,000 ($786,500) for a pressurised lunar rover (PLR) phase 0/A study to produce a conceptual design, to evaluate its functional, technical and operational requirements and determine its likely cost and development schedule.
ESA envisages a rover with a mass from 5,000kg (11,000lb) to 14,000kg that would only be delivered by NASA's Altair lunar lander.
Above: This walking lunar rover concept is from a 2002 ESA (European Space Agency) student workshop. The use of legs is considered a way of disturbing less Moon dust during locomotion.