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The question Wheels vs. tracks for rovers and Does new technology make it advantageous to have walking rovers? ask about the possible use of treads or legs instead of wheels on rovers from a speculative point of view.

But which rover already on another solar system body didn't have any wheels?

uhoh
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5 Answers5

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The list of successful rover missions is short:

  • Moon: LRV, Lunokhod, Yutu
  • Mars: Sojourner, Spirit, Opportunity, Curiosity

All of them have wheels.

The Soviet Union built two walking rovers (using 2 skis) (Prop-M), for the Mars-2 and Mars-3 missions. Both missions failed before these rovers could be deployed.

Hobbes
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The MINERVA-II rovers, 1 and 2, deployed from JAXA's Hayabusa-2 onto the asteroid 162173 Ryugu, lacked wheels. They traversed the surface by hopping, by swinging an internal counterweight. Wheels or treads wouldn't have worked in Ryugu's weak gravity.

They were deployed only after this question was first asked, though.

Camille Goudeseune
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Just for completeness sake, we should remember the dearly beloved Ingenuity Helicopter, which is very much a rover and non-wheeled.

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There was also a jumping rover for Phobos Mission failed before this rover could be deployed. Phobos rover At 7:18

A universal rover for Mars and Venus was also developed with a wind generator as a source of electrical energy. This rover could walk when needed. Due to the collapse of the USSR, these missions to Mars and Venus were never launched. Venera-Mars rover At

A. Rumlin
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Looks like @Hobbes nailed it right off with this answer. There are two Prop-M rovers on Mars. While Mars-2 crash-landed, Mars-3 landed and began transmitting. However, thanks to some excellent research by @called2voyage, we can see that because the rovers would not be deployed without explicit radio instruction, neither rovers were ever able to "rove" on Mars. Nevertheless it seems they are there, in some form or other.

I'll have to think of something harder for a puzzler next time.

I'll add this cute GIF and photo, both found at the Wikipedia article for Mars 3. According to the article, the rover was to remain attached by an umbilical to the lander, and do some local exploration while monitored and sometimes filmed by the lander.

Prop-1 Mars rover

above: GIF of how the Prop-M rover uses it's "skis" to walk. Linked here, from Giphy.

Prop-1 Mars rover

above: Mars Prop-M rover from here.

uhoh
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