Planetary Rovers Might Roam Betterwith an Elastic Loop Mobility System
Dr. Nicholas Costes, a senior research scientist at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, and Dr. Stein Sture of the University of Colorado believe that dusting off an old design will improve mobility for planetary craft as mankind dispatches more rovers to Mars. (Costes and Sture are project scientist and principal investigator, respectively, on the Mechanics of Granular Materials experiments aboard the Space Shuttle.)
Right: Costes in 1973 with test models of the Elastic Loop Mobility System and a model of a mobile Viking lander. The original idea came from a 1933 patent by J.G.K. Kitchens for an "endless traveler track band." Kitchens, an Englishman, proposed using a continuous, elastic track to move vehicles through loose soil and mud. The track would curl across its width so the section between wheels would flatten out and hold the track taut. Tanks and bulldozers, by comparison, have treads made of multiple, interlocked shoes. The problem with the original design was it used two large wheels at front and back. These tended to jam rocks between the track and the wheels, so it never progressed beyond test models, despite the great promise of eliminating several moving parts. For the Lunar Rover Vehicles on Project Apollo, NASA developed a wire mesh wheel that would not go flat. Working on improved designs, Costes revived Kitchens' idea with an interesting variation.
See note at bottom of story for information about high-resolution copies.
The new design also spread the vehicle's load over a larger area, giving the vehicle better traction in a smaller package than it could get with wheels. The drawing at right depicts the basic design of the ELMS. A working vehicle could be much longer with little change in this outline. Links to 640x350-pixel, 32K GIF. Credit: NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center. Tests on simulated lunar soil at the U.S. Army's Waterways Experiment Station showed that the loop wheel, as they sometimes called it, performed better than the Lunar Rover wheels. Loop wheel vehicles could climb 35-degree slopes, compared to an 18-degree maximum for the Lunar Rover, and could climb obstacles twice as large as those of conventional treaded vehicles. The quality of the ride was improved, too.
Spurred by the success of Sojourner (right), with metal wheels, readied for flight), NASA is preparing to launch a new generation of planetary craft, and Costes and Sture are proposing that the ELMS concept get another look for planetary missions.
The value goes beyond a smooth ride and the ability to climb steep hills. An ELMS rover would also be sure-footed, providing a stable platform for science equipment to pick up samples or to drill core samples.A stable platform will be especially important, Costes contends, because the rover and its excavation equipment will have to be lightweight to reduce costs. It would also give science instruments on a rover a better view of the terrain since the tracks would be closer to the ground than instruments on other rovers. Return to the lead Space '98 lead story or check the space construction story. Only one original image of the ELMS test model - the second in the sequence - is available at present. It is offered as a 3,002x2,374-pixel, 1.6 MB jpg. The others were scanned from a 1973 paper by Costes and Trautwein. The images range from 1391x877 to 1516x815 pixels and 627K to 517K in size. Because they were scanned from a halftone copy, the quality is low and some manipulation may be required. [ELMS rover stowed ][ELMS rover moving][1.5-meter-long test model][Incline test] Photo credit: NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center. Want to look for more pictures? Check the NASA Image Exchange. To read more:
return to Space Sciences Laboratory Home
Author: Dave
Dooling |