Mars Institute to drive HUMMER-based rover through Northwest Passage
It might seem a bit paradoxical to drive a HUMMER for 1,200 miles across the thin ice of the Northwest Passage with the goal of investigating climate change in the arctic circle, but that's exactly what a crew from the Mars Institute is planning to do. The team will be charting the thickness of the ice as it moves at about 12 miles per hour over the surface, but the information gathered during the trek will really just be a bonus. The team's first priority will be to see how the HUMMER-based rover fares in these harsh conditions. At some point, the Mars Institute hopes that this data will prove useful in helping NASA design human-toting vehicles that will be able to traverse the surface of Mars.
To assist the team's main diesel-powered vehicle, two snowmobiles will tag along to watch for cracks in the ice and to keep tabs on the HUMMER. This may be the last time a team is able to travel across the frozen Northwest Passage, so we wish them the best of luck.
[Sources: Mars Institute, Popular Mechanics]
To assist the team's main diesel-powered vehicle, two snowmobiles will tag along to watch for cracks in the ice and to keep tabs on the HUMMER. This may be the last time a team is able to travel across the frozen Northwest Passage, so we wish them the best of luck.
[Sources: Mars Institute, Popular Mechanics]

Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Mike Z 12:01PM (3/20/2009)
That is not a Hummer. It appears to be a military based Humvee and is almost surely diesel powered.
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CraigK 1:00PM (3/20/2009)
I think the glaring question what are they going to power this thing? Are they going to strap on oxygen tanks so the combustible diesel engine will work? Either way that monster looks terribly inefficient. The lunar rover was 440lbs what is this going to be, several tons?
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CraigK 1:03PM (3/20/2009)
Uh... never mind. It probably helps if I read the entire article. They are traversing the northwest passage to provide data for human toting vehicles.
jpm 2:39PM (3/20/2009)
looks like a big waste of money and time.
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Chris M 6:59PM (3/20/2009)
Rather risky, if the ice should break, I don't think this monster sno-cat will float, and survival time in cold arctic waters is very short. Snowmobiles be of much help if that happens, they don't float either.
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